Long-term changes in the frequency and outcome of hepatitis delta virus (HDV) infection have seldom been analysed. This retrospective, longitudinal study includes 398 consecutive hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)-positive patients with anti-HDV antibodies who attended our institution between 1983 and 2008. At enrolment, 182 patients had acute and 216 chronic hepatitis. Patients were grouped into two periods. Those who attended between 1983 and 1995 and those between 1996 and 2008. The former group was significantly younger, mainly intravenous drugs users, and had a greater incidence of acute HDV and HIV and HCV coinfection. Patients with acute HBV/HDV coinfection cleared both infections in 90% of cases, while all patients with HDV superinfection evolved to chronic disease. One hundred and fifty-eight patients with chronic HDV were followed for a median period of 158months. Seventy-two per cent of the patients remained stable, 18% had hepatic decompensation, 3% developed hepatocellular carcinoma, and 8% cleared HBsAg. Liver-related death was observed in 13% of patients and mainly occurred in patients from the first period (P=0.012). These results indicate an outbreak of HDV at the end of the 1980s and the beginning of the 1990s, with a large number of acute HDV cases affecting predominately young, male intravenous drug users. Currently, patients with chronic HDV disease are older, and factors associated with worse prognosis include the presence of cirrhosis and age at the time of diagnosis.
There are seven confirmed hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotypes, with whole-genome nucleotide sequences differing by Ͼ30%, and each can be further subdivided into related subtypes (67 confirmed), with nucleotide sequence divergence of between 15% and 30% (1).Genotype identification has long been used in clinical practice, because major genotypes have different response rates and require different doses and durations of pegylated interferon and ribavirin (PR) treatment. In contrast, until recently, subtype identification was mainly used in epidemiological studies. However, both in vitro studies and clinical trials with different classes of direct-acting antiviral (DAA) agents (NS3 protease, NS5A-, and nucleos[t]ide and nonnucleos[t]ide NS5B-polymerase inhibitors), given with PR or in interferon-free combinations, have shown lower response rates for HCV genotype 1a than for HCV genotype 1b (2-8). Moreover, at least for HCV genotype 1, both the frequency and the pattern of resistance to different DAA classes are subtype specific (9). A striking example is the NS3-Q80K polymorphism, naturally found in Ͼ30% of naive subtype 1a patients but in Ͻ1% of subtype 1b patients (10), which conveys 30%-to-40%-lower sustained-virologic-response (SVR) rates to the macrocyclic protease inhibitor simeprevir (2). Similarly, all subtype 1g sequences identified naturally carry a mutation conferring resistance to linear NS3 protease inhibitors (11).Subtype-specific differences in the genetic barrier to resistance appear to correlate to the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase mu-
BackgroundAcute and chronic hepatitis E have been associated with high mortality and development of cirrhosis, particularly in solid-organ recipients and patients infected by human immunodeficiency virus. However, data regarding the epidemiology of hepatitis E in special populations is still limited.AimsInvestigate seroprevalence and possible factors associated with HEV infection in a large cohort of immunosuppressed patients.MethodsCross-sectional study testing IgG anti-HEV in serum samples from 1373 consecutive individuals: 332 liver-transplant, 296 kidney-transplant, 6 dual organ recipients, 301 non-transplanted patients with chronic liver disease, 238 HIV-infected patients and 200 healthy controls.ResultsIgG anti-HEV was detected in 3.5% controls, 3.7% kidney recipients, 7.4% liver transplant without cirrhosis and 32.1% patients who developed post-transplant cirrhosis (p<0.01). In patients with chronic liver disease, IgG anti-HEV was also statistically higher in those with liver cirrhosis (2% vs 17.5%, p<0.01). HIV-infected patients showed an IgG anti-HEV rate of 9.2%, higher than those patients without HIV infection (p<0.03). Multivariate analysis showed that the factors independently associated with anti-HEV detection were liver cirrhosis, liver transplantation and HIV infection (OR: 7.6, 3.1 and 2.4). HCV infection was a protective factor for HEV infection (OR: 0.4).ConclusionsHEV seroprevalence was high in liver transplant recipients, particularly those with liver cirrhosis. The difference in anti-HEV prevalence between Liver and Kidney transplanted cases suggests an association with advanced liver disease. Further research is needed to ascertain whether cirrhosis is a predisposing factor for HEV infection or whether HEV infection may play a role in the pathogeneses of cirrhosis.
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