Popis: |
In 2015, 257 million people lived with chronic hepatitis B infection. In Portugal 1.4% of the population is chronically infected with hepatitis B virus. Limited information is available regarding the genetic diversity, origin of HBV in Portugal and its role in the dissemination of HBV worldwide. In this study, we aimed to investigate the epidemic history and transmission dynamics of HBV genotypes that are endemic in Portugal. HBV pol gene was sequenced from 130 patients followed in Lisbon. HBV genotype A (HBV/A) was the most prevalent genotype (n=54, 41.5%), followed by D [HBV/D; (n=44, 33.8%)], and E [HBV/E; (n=32, 24.6%)]. Spatio-temporal evolutionary dynamics were reconstructed using a Bayesian Markov Chain Monte Carlo method, as implemented in BEAST v1.10.4, with a GTR nucleotide substitution model, an uncorrelated lognormal relaxed molecular clock model under a Bayesian skyline plot and a continuous diffusion model. Our results indicate that HBV/D4 was the first subgenotype to be introduced in Portugal by the end of the XIX century, around 1857 (HPD 95% 1699 - 1931) followed by subgenotypes D3 and A2 a few decades later. Genotype E and subgenotype A1 were introduced in Portugal later, almost simultaneously. Our results also indicate a very important role of Portugal in the exportation of HBV subgenotypes D4 and A2 to Brazil and Cape Verde, respectively, in the beginning of the XX century. This work clarifies the epidemiological history of HBV in Portugal and show that Portugal had an important role in the global spread of this virus. |