Annals of Hepatology (Sep 2012)

Natural history of hepatitis C virus infection in a cohort of asymptomatic post-transfused subjects

  • María Virginia Reggiardo,
  • Fabián Fay,
  • Mario Tanno,
  • Gabriela García-Camacho,
  • Oscar Bottaso,
  • Sebastián Ferretti,
  • Alicia Godoy,
  • Claudio Guerrita,
  • Mauro Paez,
  • Federico Tanno,
  • Orlando Ruffinengo,
  • Silvina Benetti,
  • Silvia E García Borrás,
  • M Celina Rossi,
  • Julio Vorobioff,
  • Fernando Bessone,
  • Hugo Tanno

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
pp. 658 – 666

Abstract

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Background & aims. Studies about the natural history of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection report variable progression to cirrhosis depending on study design. Retrospective cross-sectional liver clinic studies overestimate the rate of fibrosis progression due to inclusion of patients with more severe disease leaving mild and asymptomatic patients underrepresented. We evaluated fibrosis progression in a group of “healthy” asymptomatic subjects, attending to a voluntary campaign for the detection of HCV infection.Material and methods. A detection campaign was launched on subjects transfused before 1993. Of 1699 volunteers, 61(3.6%) had HCV infection. A liver biopsy was performed in 40 (65%). Assessed risk factors for liver fibrosis were: sex, body mass index, alcohol consumption (> 20 g/d♀ - >40g/d♂), genotype, HLA-DRB1 alleles, present age, age at infection and duration of infection.Results. 25 (62.5%) were women with a median age of 52.5 years. The median duration of infection was 21.5 years with a median age at infection of 27 years. As regards fibrosis, 25 (62.5%) had a Low Stage (F0-F1), 8 patients, 20%, had severe fibrosis, one patient (2.5%) had cirrhosis. Alcohol consumption was the only risk factor associated with fibrosis progression.Conclusions. The low progression to cirrhosis may be explained by the clinical characteristics of ourpopulation: asymptomatic middle-aged “healthy” subjects infected at young age. The progression to severe fibrosis was noticeable; hence a longer follow-up might demonstrate changes in this outcome. Significant alcohol consumption clearly worsens the natural history of HCV infection; this is no so evident for occasional or mild alcohol consumers.

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