Clinical 
                  Course of Chronic Hepatitis B in Children
                
                  
                   
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                          | SUMMARY: 
                            Although children with chronic hepatitis B typically 
                            experience relatively mild disease, some develop advanced 
                            liver damage, according to a Polish study reported 
                            in the December 
                            2009 European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology. 
                            Out of 200 children studied, 4% had advanced fibrosis 
                            or cirrhosis, and progression appeared to be related 
                            to age at the time of infection. |  |  |  | 
                   
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                By 
                  Liz Highleyman
                
                Iwona 
                  Mozer-Lisewska from the University of Medical Sciences in Poznañ, 
                  Poland, and colleagues conducted a study to assess inflammatory 
                  activity, liver fibrosis, 
                  and their relation to clinical data in children 
                  with chronic hepatitis B who were not yet receiving antiviral 
                  treatment. 
                  
                  The study included 200 children with chronic hepatitis B, aged 
                  1.5 to 18 years (mean 7.5 years), who were hospitalized before 
                  liver biopsy between 1992 and 2003. 
                  
                  The investigators analyzed disease history and clinical data. 
                  Necroinflammatory activity refers to degree of liver cell death 
                  and inflammation, indicated by biopsy findings and elevations 
                  in ALT and AST liver enzymes. Histopathological assessment, 
                  or degree of fibrosis seen in a biopsy specimen, was based on 
                  the modified Knodell staging system.
                
                Results
                
                   
                    |  | 115 
                      children (58%) were found have mild necroinflammatory activity 
                      and 44 (22%) had was moderate activity. | 
                   
                    |  | 93 
                      children (47%) had minimal fibrosis (stage 1), 62 children 
                      (31%) had moderate fibrosis (stage 2), and the remaining 
                      8 children (4%) had severe fibrosis or cirrhosis (stage 
                      3-4). | 
                   
                    |  | ALT 
                      activity was proportional to staging, and was significantly 
                      higher in children with fibrosis stage 2 or higher. | 
                   
                    |  | Spontaneous 
                      hepatitis B early or "e" antigen (HBeAg) seroconversion 
                      occurred in 30 of 200 children (15%), and was related to 
                      shorter length of infection. | 
                
                Based 
                  on these findings the study authors concluded, "Intensity 
                  of liver injury in children with chronic hepatitis B varies 
                  from minimal to marked necroinflammatory activity and fibrosis 
                  varies from none to advanced."
                  
                  "Progression of liver fibrosis seems to be proportional 
                  to the age at infection," they continued. "ALT activity 
                  appears to be higher in the children with significant (S2-S4) 
                  fibrosis. Spontaneous hepatitis B early antigen seroconversion 
                  is apparently related to the shorter length of infection and 
                  higher ALT activity."
                  
                  Department of Infectious Diseases and Child Neurology, University 
                  of Medical Sciences, Poznañ, Poland.
                  
                  1/22/10
                Reference
                  I 
                  Mozer-Lisewska, A Mania, W Sluzewski , and others. Factors influencing 
                  clinical course and histological findings in children with chronic 
                  hepatitis B. European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology 
                  21(12): 1400-1406 (Abstract). 
                  December 2009.