1.In vitro Evaluation of Anti-Chikungunya Virus Activities of Tualang Honey
Barkhadle, N.I. ; Mohamud, R. ; Mat Jusoh, T.N.A. ; Shueb, R.H.
Tropical Biomedicine 2021;38(No.1):42-49
Chikungunya is an infection caused by chikungunya virus (CHIKV). Although chikungunya has
affected many countries in recent times, specific treatment or licensed vaccine are nonexistent. In this study the potential antiviral properties of Tualang honey against in vitro
CHIKV infection was evaluated. Cytotoxic test was performed using the XTT Cell Viability
assay to determine maximum non-toxic dose (MNTD) in Vero cells. Using plaque assay, the
potential antiviral activities of Tualang honey at various non-toxic concentrations and
treatment regimens were evaluated. Tualang honey demonstrated virucidal effect with
maximum inhibition CHIKV observed was 99.71% (p< 0.05). Tualang honey also had a
prophylactic property by conferring protection to Vero cells during pre-treatment assay,
resulting in up to 98.22% reduction of CHIKV replication under certain treatment regimen.
Furthermore, Tualang honey exhibited anti-viral activities, with as much as 94.87% inhibition
following post-treatment assay of Tualang honey in CHIKV-infected Vero cells. Additionally,
Tualang honey also affected viral entry up to 82.21% after 48 hours of infection. These results
suggest that Tualang honey has wide anti-CHIKV activities in Vero cells and exerts its effect
through different mechanisms although these need to be further validated in other cells or
model of CHIKV infection.
2.Prevalence of Epstein-Barr virus infection in individuals with nasopharyngeal carcinoma in Malaysia: The first systematic review and meta-analysis
Engku Abd Rahman, E.N.S. ; Irekeola, A.A. ; Shueb, R.H. ; Mohamud, R. ; Mat Lazim, N. ; Abdullah, B. ; Chan, Y.Y.
Tropical Biomedicine 2022;39(No.1):89-98
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) was the first herpesvirus associated to human malignancies. Despite
the well-known association between EBV and malignancies, the prevalence of EBV infection
in Malaysians with malignancies is unknown. Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic
Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) was used to conduct a systematic review and metaanalysis of published data in this study. Studies reporting the occurrence of EBV infection in
Malaysian malignancy patients were searched in electronic databases like PubMed, Scopus,
ScienceDirect, and Google Scholar without year or language constraints. The study protocol
was filed in PROSPERO (CRD42021273769). A total of 21 studies were included, with 1,036 EBV
infection cases among 2,078 malignancy patients. The random-effects model was used to
produce summary estimates. The pooled prevalence of EBV infection in Malaysians with
malignancy was 36.3% (95% CI, 20.3 – 56.2). When the prevalence estimates were stratified by
malignancy type, nasopharyngeal carcinoma has the highest prevalence (90.5%), followed
by lymphoma (23.4%), and gastric carcinoma (10.0%). Male patients had a higher cases
prevalence and most patients were above the age of 40. In Malaysia, many malignancies are
increasingly linked to EBV infection. Screening for EBV infection in malignancy patients is
therefore important to determine disease recurrence and metastases.