02412nas a2200301 4500000000100000008004100001260001300042653002000055653002600075653002600101653003300127653002600160653001600186653001100202653001400213653002800227653001200255653001300267653002900280653000900309100001300318700001300331245015400344300001100498490000700509520158000516022001402096 2008 d c2008 Jun10aAfrica, Central10aAnti-Infective Agents10aBlood-Borne Pathogens10aCommunicable Disease Control10aCommunicable Diseases10aHepatitis C10aHumans10aIncidence10aInjections, Intravenous10aleprosy10aSyphilis10aTrypanosomiasis, African10aYaws1 aPépin J1 aLabbé A00aNoble goals, unforeseen consequences: control of tropical diseases in colonial Central Africa and the iatrogenic transmission of blood-borne viruses. a744-530 v133 a

BACKGROUND: In southern Cameroon, 40-50% of individuals born before 1945 have antibodies against hepatitis C virus (HCV), suggesting massive iatrogenic transmission of at least one blood-borne virus in the region of the world where SIV(cpz) emerged into HIV-1.

OBJECTIVE: To estimate the potential role of disease control programs that used intravenous (IV) drugs in the transmission of blood-borne viruses, especially HCV. Methods We reviewed, for 1921-1959, records of health services in Cameroun, Oubangui-Chari, Gabon and Moyen-Congo. We calculated the incidence of diseases whose treatment required the administration of IV drugs, and compared these with previously published data on HCV prevalence.

RESULTS: Several IV drugs were used against African trypanosomiasis, leprosy, yaws and syphilis. However, yaws was the only disease whose incidence was high enough so that up to half of some birth cohorts could have acquired HCV. Yaws incidence varied dramatically between regions, and was often >200 per 1000 per year in southern Cameroon, where extremely high HCV prevalence was found. Yaws incidence peaked between 1935 and 1955, a period which coincided with the emergence of HCV and HIV.

CONCLUSION: Age, geographical and temporal distributions of yaws suggest that the HCV epidemic in Cameroon was driven by campaigns against yaws (and, secondarily, syphilis) using arsenicals and other metallic drugs. The same interventions may have exponentially amplified other blood-borne viruses, including SIV(cpz)/HIV-1.

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