Another
Study Confirms Hepatitis B Virus Suppresses Hepatitis C Virus Replication in HBV-HCV
Coinfected Individuals By
Liz Highleyman Due
to overlapping transmission routes, many people are dually infected with both
hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis
C virus (HCV).
In
a poster presentation this week at the 48th International
Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC) in Washington,
DC, Italian researchers presented data confirming prior research showing that
the presence of HBV interferes with HCV replication. The
investigators performed long-term clinical and virological follow-up of 29 chronic
hepatitis C patients with HBV superinfection and 29 HCV negative individuals with
acute hepatitis B. Patients in the 2 groups were matched for age (+/- 5 years),
sex, and HBV risk factors. Results
At the first observation, HBV-HCV coinfected
patients and HBV monoinfected individuals had similar HBV DNA viral load (mean
7.1 vs 1.6 x 108) and a similar trend towards becoming HBV negative (HBV clearance).
Severe acute hepatitis B was more frequent
in the HBV-HCV coinfected group than in the HBV monoinfected group (34.5% vs 6.9%;
P < 0.05).
Of the 28 patients in the HBV-HCV superinfection
group who were still alive at the end of acute illness (1 died of sub-acute progressive
hepatitis), 24 (85.7%) were followed for 2-6 years (median 5 years):
21 of these 24 patients became hepatitis
B surface antigen (HBsAg) negative (87.5%);
2 progressed to HBsAg positive chronic
hepatitis (8.3%);
1 underwent liver transplantation (4.1%).
Data on HCV RNA levels before the development
of acute hepatitis B and every 12 months thereafter were available for 19 patients:
All became HCV RNA negative during the
acute phase of hepatitis B (100%);
16 patients still had undetectable plasma
HCV RNA after 1 year (84.2%);
9 still had undetectable HCV RNA after
2 years (47.4%);
6 still had undetectable HCV viral load
after 3-6 years (31.6%).
The 6 patients who remained persistently
HCV RNA negative during follow-up were compared with the 13 who experienced reactivation
of HCV replication:
During the acute phase of hepatitis B,
there were no observed differences in HBV viral load (P = 0.4);
Serum ALT values, however, were higher
in the persistently HCV negative subgroup (mean 5291 vs 2208; P < 0.01).
Based
on these findings, the researchers concluded, "HBV superinfection in HCV
chronic carriers was associated with a strong inhibition [of] HCV replication,"
especially in 6 patients with marked hepatonecrosis who fully cleared chronic
HCV infection. Second
Univ. of Naples, Naples, Italy; A.O. San Sebastiano e Sant'Anna Caserta, Caserta,
Italy.
10/31/08
Reference E Sagnelli, N Coppola, M
Pisaturo, and others. HBV Superinfection in Chronic HCV Carriers: Clinical and
Virological Long-Term Follow-Up Study. 48th International Conference on Antimicrobial
Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2008). Washington, DC. October 25-28, 2008. Abstract
V-1628. |