REVENTION and treatment of infections with hepatitis C virus (HCV) remain a major challenge. 1 The main source of HCV infection in developed countries was formerly transfusion of contaminated blood and blood products but is now injection-drug use. [2][3][4] In general, a potential risk factor can be established for about 90 percent of all cases of HCV infection. 3 One way of contracting HCV may be transmission from infected medical personnel to susceptible patients during medical care. Provider-topatient transmission of HCV is rare, and in most cases HCV-positive surgeons are the probable source. 5-7 We studied an outbreak of HCV in a municipal hospital. Our findings suggest that an anesthesiology assistant contracted HCV from a chronically infected patient and subsequently transmitted the virus to five other patients.
METHODS
PatientsThe municipal hospital in which the HCV outbreak occurred provides general as well as specialty medical and surgical services. Between July 1 and October 13, 1998, HCV infection was diagnosed in four patients (Patients 2, 3, 4, and 6 in this report) on the basis of clinical symptoms, a rise in the serum alanine aminotransferase concentration, or detection of serum HCV antibodies and HCV RNA. All of these patients had undergone orthopedic or general surgery in the same hospital 6 to 18 weeks earlier. A comprehensive investigation was initiated by the public health authorities, and we were asked to determine the circumstances of the suspected nosocomial HCV infections. An institutional review board of Essen University Hospital approved the study protocol, and the patients provided written informed consent.
Epidemiologic StudiesThe charts of all patients with HCV infection were reviewed in detail. Interviews were conducted to obtain further information about prior medical interventions, prior hepatitis infections, and P risk factors for the acquisition of HCV. To search for other potential cases of HCV transmission, we performed a retrospective seroepidemiologic study of all patients who had undergone surgery in the hospital between January and July 1998. Fifty-eight of these patients had died, and 904 were still alive; serum was obtained for antibody testing from 833 of these 904 patients. Hospital personnel were interviewed with special attention to compliance with infection-control practices and were tested for HCV antibodies. The hospital -in particular, the surgical facilities -was inspected by experts in hygiene and occupational health.
Virologic and Molecular Studies