“…In spite of the plethora of reports regarding GBV-C virus, evidence linking it to a specific liver disease or indeed, to any other illness, is still lacking [34]. GBV-C has been described in acute seronegative hepatitis (12%), cryptogenic chronic hepatitis (6%), cryptogenic cirrhosis (7%), hepatocellular cancer (25%), fulminant hepatic failure (50%), chronic hepatitis C (11%), and end-stage HCV-related cirrhosis before (24%) and after (28%) liver transplantation [36][37][38][39][40][41][42][43]. No studies, however, have demonstrated a GBV-Crelated histopathologic effect on the liver [38,41,42].…”