CLINICAL AND MICROBIOLOGICAL FEATURES OF HEPATITIS B AND D COINFECTION

Annotasiya

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) remains one of the major causes of chronic liver disease and hepatocellular carcinoma worldwide. Infection with hepatitis D virus (HDV) in individuals already infected with HBV leads to coinfection or superinfection, which significantly worsens the clinical outcome. This study reviews clinical and microbiological characteristics of HBV/HDV coinfection with a focus on available epidemiological data from Uzbekistan. The aim is to highlight virological interactions, disease progression, and implications for diagnosis and prevention.

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  • Laboratory Doctor Assistant, Bacteriology Laboratory, Uchkoprik District Department, Sanitary and Epidemiological Committee, Uzbekistan
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Кўчирилганлиги хақида маълумот йук.
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Nazirova , K. (2025). CLINICAL AND MICROBIOLOGICAL FEATURES OF HEPATITIS B AND D COINFECTION. International Journal of Artificial Intelligence, 1(7), 64–66. Retrieved from https://www.inlibrary.uz/index.php/ijai/article/view/136458
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Annotasiya

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) remains one of the major causes of chronic liver disease and hepatocellular carcinoma worldwide. Infection with hepatitis D virus (HDV) in individuals already infected with HBV leads to coinfection or superinfection, which significantly worsens the clinical outcome. This study reviews clinical and microbiological characteristics of HBV/HDV coinfection with a focus on available epidemiological data from Uzbekistan. The aim is to highlight virological interactions, disease progression, and implications for diagnosis and prevention.


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INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE

ISSN: 2692-5206, Impact Factor: 12,23

American Academic publishers, volume 05, issue 09,2025

Journal:

https://www.academicpublishers.org/journals/index.php/ijai

page 64

CLINICAL AND MICROBIOLOGICAL FEATURES OF HEPATITIS B AND D

COINFECTION

Nazirova Khusnijahon Tolqinjon kizi

Laboratory Doctor Assistant, Bacteriology Laboratory, Uchkoprik District Department,

Sanitary and Epidemiological Committee, Uzbekistan

Abstract:

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) remains one of the major causes of chronic liver disease and

hepatocellular carcinoma worldwide. Infection with hepatitis D virus (HDV) in individuals

already infected with HBV leads to coinfection or superinfection, which significantly worsens

the clinical outcome. This study reviews clinical and microbiological characteristics of

HBV/HDV coinfection with a focus on available epidemiological data from Uzbekistan. The

aim is to highlight virological interactions, disease progression, and implications for diagnosis

and prevention.

Keywords:

Hepatitis B, Hepatitis D, coinfection, liver cirrhosis, Uzbekistan, microbiology.

Introduction

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection affects nearly 300 million people globally. In countries with

high endemicity, hepatitis D virus (HDV) coinfection poses an additional public health burden.

HDV requires HBV surface antigen (HBsAg) for replication and persistence, making HBV

carriers especially vulnerable. The coinfection leads to more severe liver damage, rapid

progression to cirrhosis, and a higher risk of hepatocellular carcinoma compared to HBV

monoinfection.

Uzbekistan, located in Central Asia, is considered a region with intermediate endemicity for

HBV. Recent studies have demonstrated that HDV infection is widespread among HBV-

infected patients, particularly those with cirrhosis. This article examines the clinical and

microbiological features of HBV/HDV coinfection, with an emphasis on epidemiological

findings from Uzbekistan.

Methods

This study is based on a literature review of PubMed, ResearchGate, and national

epidemiological reports (2016–2024). Data were extracted on HBV and HDV prevalence,

clinical manifestations, and microbiological characteristics. Particular attention was given to

studies that specifically addressed the epidemiology of HBV/HDV coinfection in Uzbekistan.

Results

Clinical and Microbiological Features

Virological interaction:

HDV relies on HBV surface antigen for replication, making

HBV carriers susceptible. HDV infection suppresses HBV replication but significantly

enhances liver inflammation.

Clinical severity:

Patients with HBV/HDV coinfection show faster progression to

cirrhosis, hepatic decompensation, and higher mortality.

Microbiological characteristics:

HDV is a defective RNA virus requiring HBV as a

helper virus. Molecular analysis shows high variability among circulating HDV genotypes, with

genotype I being the most prevalent in Central Asia.

Epidemiological Data from Uzbekistan


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INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE

ISSN: 2692-5206, Impact Factor: 12,23

American Academic publishers, volume 05, issue 09,2025

Journal:

https://www.academicpublishers.org/journals/index.php/ijai

page 65

Epidemiological studies demonstrate high prevalence rates of HDV infection among HBV

patients in Uzbekistan. In cirrhosis cases positive for HBsAg, HDV coinfection rates were

recorded as follows:

2016 – 76.5 %

2017 – 80.5 %

2018 – 84.0 %

(PubMed, 2019,

ResearchGate, 2020

).

A recent national screening program (2022–2024) found:

HBsAg prevalence – 2.89 %

Anti-HCV prevalence – 3.52 %

(PubMed, 2024).

Among children, due to successful HBV vaccination programs, HBsAg prevalence dropped to

only

0.20 %

(PubMed, 2023).

Table 1. HBV and HDV epidemiology in Uzbekistan
Indicator

Data (Uzbekistan)

HDV coinfection among HBsAg+ cirrhosis (2016)

76.5 %

HDV coinfection among HBsAg+ cirrhosis (2017)

80.5 %

HDV coinfection among HBsAg+ cirrhosis (2018)

84.0 %

HBsAg prevalence (general population, 2022–2024)

2.89 %

Anti-HCV prevalence (general population, 2022–2024) 3.52 %
HBsAg prevalence (children, after vaccination)

0.20 %

Figure 1. Prevalence of HDV infection among HBsAg-positive cirrhosis patients in

Uzbekistan (2016–2018)

(Diagram: line graph showing steady increase from 76.5 % in 2016 to 84 % in 2018)

This figure illustrates the rising trend of HDV coinfection in cirrhotic patients. Such a pattern

indicates the heavy burden of HBV/HDV in high-risk groups, despite relatively lower

prevalence in the general population.

Discussion

The data show that HBV/HDV coinfection is a major contributor to liver disease burden in

Uzbekistan. The very high prevalence of HDV in cirrhosis cases indicates that HDV plays a

critical role in disease progression. The sharp contrast between low HBsAg prevalence in

children (0.20 %) and higher prevalence in adults (2.89 %) highlights the success of vaccination

programs, but also shows the need for continued monitoring of older age groups.

Microbiologically, the presence of HDV significantly modifies HBV replication, suppressing

HBV DNA levels but amplifying liver damage. This dual effect complicates both diagnosis and

treatment. Current antiviral therapies are limited, and interferon-based regimens remain the

mainstay, though with modest efficacy.

Conclusion

HBV/HDV coinfection represents a severe form of viral hepatitis with accelerated progression

to cirrhosis and liver cancer. In Uzbekistan, epidemiological data demonstrate alarmingly high

prevalence rates among cirrhotic patients, despite decreasing HBV prevalence in the general

population and successful vaccination coverage among children.

Recommendations:


background image

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE

ISSN: 2692-5206, Impact Factor: 12,23

American Academic publishers, volume 05, issue 09,2025

Journal:

https://www.academicpublishers.org/journals/index.php/ijai

page 66

Strengthen national HBV vaccination programs and expand adult vaccination.

Improve diagnostic screening for HDV in all HBsAg-positive patients.

Encourage further research into genotype-specific therapies for HDV.

Introduce public health policies targeting early detection and management of coinfection.

References

1.

World Health Organization. Global Hepatitis Report. Geneva: WHO; 2023.

2.

El-Serag HB. Hepatitis viruses and liver cancer.

Gastroenterology

. 2020.

3.

Tu T, et al. Hepatitis B virus-related hepatocellular carcinoma.

Front Oncol

. 2021.

4.

Zhou J, et al. The HBx protein in carcinogenesis.

Cell Mol Immunol

. 2020.

5.

Forner A, et al. Hepatocellular carcinoma.

Lancet

. 2018.

6.

Nishida N, et al. MicroRNAs in hepatitis and cancer.

Front Med

. 2019.

7.

Sugimoto K. Gut microbiota in liver disease.

Hepatol Res

. 2021.

8.

Terrault NA, et al. Prevention of HCC in hepatitis patients.

Clin Liver Dis

. 2020.

9.

Holčapek M, et al. Lipidomics in hepatocellular carcinoma.

Metabolites

. 2021.

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Tang A, et al. Epidemiology of hepatocellular carcinoma.

Abdom Radiol

. 2018.

11.

Uzbekistan study on HDV prevalence.

PubMed

(2019), [PMID: 31505080].

12.

Hepatitis D virus in Uzbekistan.

ResearchGate

(2020).

13.

National screening data, Uzbekistan 2022–2024.

PubMed

(2024), [PMID: 40843480].

14.

HBV prevalence in children after vaccination.

PubMed

(2023), [PMID: 39862544].

15.

Nazirova Khusnijahon To‘lqinjon qizi. (2025). MICROBIOLOGICAL LINK

BETWEEN HEPATITIS VIRUSES AND LIVER CANCER FORMATION.

Ethiopian

International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research

,

12

(08), 83–86

Bibliografik manbalar

World Health Organization. Global Hepatitis Report. Geneva: WHO; 2023.

El-Serag HB. Hepatitis viruses and liver cancer. Gastroenterology. 2020.

Tu T, et al. Hepatitis B virus-related hepatocellular carcinoma. Front Oncol. 2021.

Zhou J, et al. The HBx protein in carcinogenesis. Cell Mol Immunol. 2020.

Forner A, et al. Hepatocellular carcinoma. Lancet. 2018.

Nishida N, et al. MicroRNAs in hepatitis and cancer. Front Med. 2019.

Sugimoto K. Gut microbiota in liver disease. Hepatol Res. 2021.

Terrault NA, et al. Prevention of HCC in hepatitis patients. Clin Liver Dis. 2020.

Holčapek M, et al. Lipidomics in hepatocellular carcinoma. Metabolites. 2021.

Tang A, et al. Epidemiology of hepatocellular carcinoma. Abdom Radiol. 2018.

Uzbekistan study on HDV prevalence. PubMed (2019), [PMID: 31505080].

Hepatitis D virus in Uzbekistan. ResearchGate (2020).

National screening data, Uzbekistan 2022–2024. PubMed (2024), [PMID: 40843480].

HBV prevalence in children after vaccination. PubMed (2023), [PMID: 39862544].

Nazirova Khusnijahon To‘lqinjon qizi. (2025). MICROBIOLOGICAL LINK BETWEEN HEPATITIS VIRUSES AND LIVER CANCER FORMATION. Ethiopian International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research, 12(08), 83–86