Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases (Mar 2016)

High incidence of tuberculosis in patients treated for hepatitis C chronic infection

  • Silvia Naomi de Oliveira Uehara,
  • Christini Takemi Emori,
  • Renata Mello Perez,
  • Maria Cassia Jacintho Mendes-Correa,
  • Adalgisa de Souza Paiva Ferreira,
  • Ana Cristina de Castro Amaral Feldner,
  • Antonio Eduardo Benedito Silva,
  • Roberto José Carvalho Filho,
  • Ivonete Sandra de Souza e Silva,
  • Maria Lucia Cardoso Gomes Ferraz

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 2
pp. 205 – 209

Abstract

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Brazil is one of the 22 countries that concentrates 80% of global tuberculosis cases concomitantly to a large number of hepatitis C carriers and some epidemiological risk scenarios are coincident for both diseases. We analyzed tuberculosis cases that occurred during α-interferon-based therapy for hepatitis C in reference centers in Brazil between 2001 and 2012 and reviewed their medical records. Eighteen tuberculosis cases were observed in patients submitted to hepatitis C α-interferon-based therapy. All patients were human immunodeficiency virus-negative. Nine patients (50%) had extra-pulmonary tuberculosis; 15 (83%) showed significant liver fibrosis. Hepatitis C treatment was discontinued in 12 patients (67%) due to tuberculosis reactivation and six (33%) had sustained virological response. The majority of patients had a favorable outcome but one died. Considering the evidences of α-IFN interference over the containment of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the immune impairment of cirrhotic patients, the increase of tuberculosis case reports during hepatitis C treatment with atypical and severe presentations and the negative impact on sustained virological response, we think these are strong arguments for latent tuberculosis infection screening before starting α-interferon-based therapy for any indication and even to consider IFN-free regimens against hepatitis C when a patient tests positive for latent tuberculosis infection. Keywords: Hepatitis C, Tuberculosis, Alpha-interferon, Latent tuberculosis infection