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  HIV and Hepatitis.com Coverage of the
 44th Annual Meeting of the European Association for
 the Study of the Liver (EASL 2009)
  April 22 - 26, 2009, Copenhagen, Denmark
 The material posted on HIV and Hepatitis.com about EASL 2009 is not approved by nor is it a part of EASL 2009.

Studies Find No Evidence of Hepatitis C Virus Relapse or Significant Fibrosis after Spontaneous Clearance in HIV-HCV Coinfected Individuals

By Liz Highleyman

About 25% of individuals with hepatitis C virus (HCV) monoinfection spontaneously clear the virus without treatment, although some studies have reported continued low-level HCV replication in the liver despite undetectable serum HCV RNA.

Spontaneous clearance is less likely to occur in HIV-HCV coinfected people, but when it does, clearance is sustained over the long term -- with a reduced risk of liver disease progression -- according to 2 studies presented at the 44th Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL 2009) last month in Copenhagen.

Long-term HCV Clearance

In the first study, P. Barreiro and colleagues from Hospital Carlos III in Madrid, Spain, evaluated 827 HIV positive individuals with antibodies against HCV; the patients had never been treated with interferon-based therapy for hepatitis C.

Within this coinfected cohort, 174 patients had undetectable serum HCV RNA. Of these, 42 had elevated liver enzymes (ALT, AST), which could be attributed to heavy alcohol use in 26 cases and steatosis in 10 cases, but had no known cause in 6 cases. Individuals with detectable hepatitis B virus (HBV) surface antigen (HBsAg) were excluded.

This left 132 HCV antibody positive but HCV RNA negative patients to be included in the present analysis. About 80% were men, the mean age was 38 years, and 84% had a history of injection drug use. Most (82%) were on HAART and the mean CD4 cell count was 421 cells/mm3.

Repeated serum HCV RNA testing (median 3 times per person) over a median follow-up period of 3 years did not reveal a single positive result using a real-time PCR assay with a lower limit of detection of 10 IU/mL. Furthermore, participants had absent or mild liver fibrosis as estimated using transient elastometry (FibroScan), with a mean value of 5.41 kPa and a median of 4.90 kPa. Only 1 patient had moderate (Metavir stage F2) fibrosis.

"There is no evidence for low-level HCV replication [or] for significant hepatic fibrosis" in HIV positive individuals who have spontaneously cleared HCV infection, the investigators concluded. "This information strongly suggests that HCV eradication has occurred in this subset of patients."

Hospital Carlos III, Madrid, Spain

HCV Reappearance

In a related study, L. Peters from the University of Copenhagen and an international team of colleagues followed 256 HIV positive patients in the large EuroSIDA cohort who were previously shown to have spontaneously cleared HCV infection (23% of the 1940 HCV antibody positive patients in the cohort).

All HIV positive patients with prior spontaneous HCV clearance and at least 1 subsequent follow-up plasma sample were analyzed. The final sample was tested for HCV RNA using the Roche Cobas TaqMan assay.

Individuals with HCV RNA > 615 IU/mL were defined as having HCV "reappearance." These patients were compared with those who still had undetectable HCV viral load. Logistic regression was used to identify factors associated with HCV reappearance.

Of the 256 patients included in the analysis, 46 (18%) showed evidence of HCV reappearance -- with a median HCV RNA level of 462,500 IU/mL -- over a median follow-up period of about 3 years. Compared to patients who remained HCV RNA negative, those who experienced HCV reappearance were significantly more likely to be injection drug users (80% vs 58%), but significantly less likely to be HBsAg positive (2% vs 15%).

The researchers concluded that reinfection due to repeated exposure to HCV, primarily among injection drug users, was the most likely explanation for these findings, rather than HCV relapse due to HIV-associated immunosuppression. Furthermore, these results support previous research indicating that HCV and HBV inhibit one another, and the presence of HBV provides some protection against HCV infection.

Copenhagen HIV Programme - University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark; University College Medical School, Royal Free Campus, London, UK; Hospital Carlos III, Madrid, Spai; University of Bonn, Bonn, Germany; Centre for Viral Disease/KMA, Copenhagen University Hospital, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark; Academisch Ziekenhuis bij de Universiteit van Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands; Hopital de la Pitié-Salpêtriére, Paris, France; St Petersburg AIDS Centre, St. Petersburg, Russia; Medical University of Bialystok, Bialystok, Poland.

5/19/09

References

P Barreiro, E Vispo, P Tuma, and others. No Evidence for Low-Level HCV Replication or Significant Liver Fibrosis in HIV Patients Who Spontaneously Cleared HCV Infection. 44th Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL 2009). Copenhagen, Denmark. April 22-26, 2009.

L Peters, A Mocroft, V. Soriano, and others. Hepatitis C Virus Reappearance in HIV-Infected Patients with Spontaneous HCV-RNA Clearance. EASL 2009. Copenhagen, Denmark. April 22-26, 2009.


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