We assessed the pattern of hepatitis C viremia in chronic liver disease by studying 100 hepatitis C virus antibody-positive patients: 48 with chronic hepatitis, 21 with cirrhosis and 31 with hepatocellular carcinoma and cirrhosis. Serum hepatitis C virus RNA was detected by means of both the conventional nested polymerase chain reaction and a newly developed assay based on branched DNA that can also quantify viremia. Hepatitis C virus RNA was found in 94 of 100 patients with polymerase chain reaction and in 71 of 100 patients with branched-DNA (p< 0.001). Mean viremia level (x 10(3) genome equivalents/ml +/- S.D.), as assessed with the branched-DNA test, was 5,700 +/- 7,618 in the 48 patients with chronic hepatitis, 3,340 +/- 3,633 in the 21 patients with cirrhosis and 1,768 +/- 2,770 in the 31 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (p < 0.02). We also analyzed retrospectively the relationship between viremia and treatment. Fifty-five patients (41 chronic hepatitis, 14 cirrhosis) underwent interferon-alpha treatment. Mean viremia level was comparable among the 30 responders (5,644 +/- 8,207) and the 25 nonresponders (5,519 +/- 6,208) to interferon, but it was significantly lower (1,841 +/- 1,864) in the 12 of 30 responders (11 chronic hepatitis, 1 cirrhosis) who maintained remission up to 1 yr after cessation of interferon treatment. Fourteen patients (7 chronic hepatitis, 7 cirrhosis) with autoantibodies (12 antinuclear, 2 anti-liver-kidney microsomal) were treated with prednisone. The mean viremia level significantly increased after 3 mo of treatment, even in face of ALT decrease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
To determine if hepatitis C virus infection influences the behavior of type 1 autoimmune hepatitis and to assess the performance parameters of third-generation immunoassays for viral infection in this disease, 64 patients with different patterns of disease behavior were assessed retrospectively for antibodies to hepatitis C virus by third-generation enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and recombinant immunoblot assay and for HCV RNA by polymerase chain reaction. Hepatitis C virus RNA was detected in seven patients (11%) and antibodies to hepatitis C virus were found in five (8%). All patients who had an acute onset of illness or who sustained remission after therapy lacked HCV RNA in serum. In contrast, four of 31 patients who relapsed (13%) and three of 17 patients who failed treatment (18%) had HCV RNA in serum. Patients with HCV RNA were indistinguishable from those without HCV RNA; in three patients, infection was recognized only by testing for HCV RNA. Four of seven patients with HCV RNA responded fully to corticosteroids, although each relapsed after drug withdrawal. Smooth muscle antibodies (43% versus 91%, P = 0.006) and concurrent smooth muscle and antinuclear antibodies (0% versus 60%, P = 0.003) occurred less frequently in patients with HCV RNA than in counterparts without HCV RNA. The specificity of the third-generation enzyme immunoassay was 98% and its overall predictability was 94%. Its sensitivity, however, was 57% and false positive results occurred in 20%. Hepatitis C virus infection is an uncommon determinant of disease behavior in type 1 autoimmune hepatitis, but it may be present in relapse or treatment failure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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