HIV
Coinfection Does Not Worsen Liver Transplant Outcomes in People with Hepatitis
B or C
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
SUMMARY:
HIV positive liver transplant recipients with hepatitis B
virus (HBV) or hepatitis C virus (HCV) coinfection did not
fare worse overall than HIV negative people, according to
a Spanish study presented at the 50th Interscience Conference
on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC
2010) last month in Boston. Coinfected patients were less
likely to experience organ rejection, but HCV recurrence was
a leading cause of adverse outcomes. |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
By
Liz Highleyman
About
one-third of HIV positive individuals
are estimated to be coinfected with hepatitis
B or C. Coinfection has been linked
to accelerated liver disease progression and poorer response to interferon-based
hepatitis treatment.
Several
studies conducted earlier in the HIV/AIDS epidemic showed that people
with HIV had more complications and shorter survival after liver transplantation
compared with their HIV negative counterparts, but much of this work
was done before the development of optimally suppressive and well-tolerated
combination antiretroviral
therapy (ART). More recent comparisons have found that HIV positive
and HIV negative patients can obtain similar outcomes.
In the
present study, investigators from Hospital Ramon y Cajal in Madrid looked
at complications and mortality among all 184 positive patients who received
liver transplants at their center between January 2001 and May 2010
due to cirrhosis associated with viral hepatitis. Within this group,
18 people (10%) were HIV positive.
Results
 |
HIV positive transplant recipients were significantly younger on
average than HIV negative patients (44 vs 52 years, respectively). |
 |
In
addition, HIV positive patients, relative to those without HIV,
had the following attributes: |
|
 |
Less
likely to have hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) as a transplant
indication (33% vs 53%, respectively); |
 |
Significantly
less likely to have both HBV and HCV (27% vs 5%, respectively; |
 |
Less
likely to have HBV without HCV (0% vs 14.5%). |
|
 |
MELD
scores -- a measure of liver disease severity used to prioritize
waiting-list patients -- were similar (17 vs 15 overall, or 19 in
both groups if excluding those with HCC). |
 |
No
HIV positive recipients died within 90 days of transplantation,
compared with 13% of HIV negative patients. |
 |
HIV
positive patients were also less likely to require a second transplant
(0% vs 8%, respectively). |
 |
HIV
positive people were about one-third as likely to experience acute
organ rejection after transplantation (11% vs 33%, respectively). |
 |
The
HIV positive group was considerably less likely to have cytomegalovirus
(CMV) infection (44% vs 25%, respectively). |
 |
None
of these differences, however, reached statistical significance,
perhaps due to the small number of people in the HIV positive group. |
 |
In
a multivariate analysis, independent predictors of mortality after
liver transplantation included: |
|
 |
Higher
MELD score: hazard ratio (HR) 1.072; |
 |
Older
age at the time of transplantation: HR 1.047; |
 |
CMV
infection: HR 2.605. |
|
 |
HIV
positive and HIV negative patients had similar cumulative survival
rates after transplantation: |
|
 |
1
year: 100% vs 86%, respectively; |
 |
3
years: 84% vs 76%, respectively; |
 |
5
years: 68% vs 65%, respectivey. |
|
 |
After
a median follow-up period of 126 weeks (range 1-462 weeks), survival
rates differed according to transplant indication: |
|
 |
HBV
and HCV coinfection: 100% survival; |
 |
HBV
alone: 75% survival; |
 |
HCV
alone: 60% survival. |
|
 |
Looking
only at 160 patients with HCV, complications were somewhat more
common among HIV positive compared with HIV negative individuals,
but only mortality was statistically significant: |
|
 |
Severe
HCV recurrence (17% vs 11%); |
 |
Use
of pegylated interferon plus ribavirin (39% vs 36%); |
 |
HCV-related
death (100% vs 24%). |
|
"In
viral cirrhotic subjects undergoing liver transplantation, HIV coinfection
did not worsen outcomes within the first 5 years, although 100% of deaths
(n=3) were related to HCV recurrence," the researchers concluded.
"HIV patients showed lower rates of rejection and higher rates
of CMV infection after liver transplantation.
Investigator
affiliation: Hospital Ramon y Cajal, Madrid, Spain.
10/8/10
Reference
A
Moreno, S Del Campo, R Barcena, and others. In the HAART Era, in Patients
with Viral Cirrhosis Undergoing Liver Transplantation, HIV-Coinfection
Does not Lead to Five-Year Reduced Survival. 50th Interscience Conference
on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2010). Boston, September
12-15, 2010. Abstract
V-1792.