Viral
Dominance in HBV/HCV Dual Infection
SUMMARY
Asian ethnicity is a significant independent predictor of
HBV-dominant disease in people with HBV/HCV dual infection.
With undetectable HBV viral load, HCV dominance is more common
in non-Asians. |
By
James Learned
As
much of 20% of the world's population has hepatitis B virus (HBV)
and hepatitis C virus (HCV) dual infection. In recent years, the
number of immigrants in the U.S. from Asia and the Pacific region,
where HBV is endemic, has increased to about 14 million. The number
of people with dual infection may be both underreported and increasing.
As testing becomes more widespread and more dual infections are
identified, it will be even more necessary to understand how best
to care for and treat people with both viral infections.
HBV/HCV
dual infection can lead to more serious liver disease -- including
fulminant hepatitis, advanced cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma
(HCC) -- than either HBV or HCV monoinfection. Additionally, people
with dual infection are less likely to respond to interferon-based
treatment. The interaction between HBV and HCV in dual infection
seems to be one of "reciprocal inhibition," with each
virus preventing or decreasing the ability of the other to replicate.
HCV is usually the dominant virus, yet some studies suggest that
HBV can be the dominant virus under certain circumstances.
As
described in the June
2011 issue of Hepatology, Long Nguyen and colleagues
conducted a 15-year retrospective study to identify clinical,
viral, and demographic factors (including ethnicity) of people
with HBV/HCV dual infection compared to people with HBV monoinfection,
in order to determine characteristics that influence viral dominance.
The
researchers drew upon chart reviews of patients who received medical
care at 2 sites in California between January 1994 and March 2009.
A total of 115 patients with HBV/HCV dual infection were identified,
all of whose medical charts had serial HBV DNA, HCV RNA, and alanine
aminotransferase (ALT) test results. The control group was made
up of 115 HBV-monoinfected individuals chosen randomly and matched
with the dual-infected group by age, sex, study site, and ethnicity
(Asian vs non-Asian, either self-identified or as identified by
their provider). HBV monoinfected patients were diagnosed based
on positive serum hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg).
The
dual infection and HBV monoinfection groups were evenly matched
-- 68% men and 83% Asian people in both. The groups were also
evenly matched at the time of presentation in terms of body mass
index, hepatitis B "e" antigen (HBeAg) or antibodies
to HBeAg, median follow-up duration (38 months vs 33 months),
family history of either hepatitis B or C, family history of HCC,
preexisting HCC, HBV genotype, and the presence of HBV viral mutations.
Results
 |
Dual-infected
patients most often presented with evidence of HBV/HCV infection
at baseline (88%), with HBV DNA and HCV RNA and/or HBsAg and
HCV antibodies. |
 |
The
remaining 12% were infected with the second virus at least
3 months following diagnosis of the first viral infection. |
 |
Among
these patients, 8% had HBV before acquiring HCV, and the other
4% had HCV before HBV. |
 |
Among
dual-infected Asian patients, 14% had negative viral load
results for both HBV and HCV. |
 |
Among dual-infected non-Asian patients, 25% had negative viral
load results for both viruses. |
 |
HBV-dominant
infection was found in 38% of Asian patients compared to only
10% of non-Asian patients, a significant difference: |
 |
Of
the 38% of Asian patients with HBV-dominant infection,
83% had complete dominance as defined by negative HCV
RNA and detectable HBV DNA. |
 |
The
remaining 17% had partial HBV dominance (detectable
HBV and HCV viral loads, with the HBV DNA level being
higher than that of HCV RNA). |
|
 |
All
non-Asian patients with HBV-dominant disease had complete
HBV dominance. |
 |
HCV
dominance was found in 48% of Asian patients and 65% of non-Asian
patients: |
 |
Of
this group, 70% of Asian patients had undetectable HBV viral
load and positive HCV RNA. |
|
 |
The
remaining 30% had detectable viral loads for both HBV
and HCV. |
 |
Similar
results were seen in non-Asian patients with HCV dominance. |
|
 |
Among
dual-infected patients, Asian ethnicity predicted HBV dominance
after adjusting for sex, age, and baseline ALT elevation. |
 |
Among
dual-infected patients, both female sex and baseline ALT elevation
independently predicted HCV dominance after adjusting for
age and ethnicity. |
 |
People
with HBV monoinfection were significantly more likely to receive
HBV treatment than their counterparts with dual infection
(43% versus 24%). |
 |
28%
of people with dual infection received HCV treatment. |
 |
At
baseline, HBV monoinfected patients had lower median ALT levels
than patients with dual infection. |
|
 |
ALT
levels remained lower among HBV monoinfected patients
during follow-up compared to those with dual infection. |
 |
During
follow-up, 64% of people with HBV monoinfection had
at least one elevated ALT result compared to 75% of
those with dual infection. |
|
"The
results demonstrate that Asian ethnicity can be a predictor for
HBV-dominant dual infection, and female sex and baseline ALT level
can predict HCV-dominant disease, with non-Asian ethnicity trending
toward significance," the researchers wrote.
They
continued, "The findings of the current study support the
literature that suggests dual-infected patients often have a disease
course characterized by dominance of one virus over the other."
However, they noted that patients with dual infection did not
have higher rates of liver disease or HCC compared to patients
with HBV monoinfection, in contrast to some prior studies.
The
authors noted certain limitations of their study. The median follow-up
period was short (38 months for the HBV monoinfection group and
33 months for the dual infection group), making comparisons between
the groups in terms of end-stage liver disease and HCC beyond
the study's scope. Furthermore, the study compared patients with
HBV/HCV dual infection to patients with HBV monoinfection, but
not HCV monoinfection.
The
investigators concluded that their findings "
suggest
that ethnicity may predict for the dual infection viral dominance
profile -- specifically, that Asian ethnicity is an independent
predictor for HBV-dominated dual infection."
Investigator
affiliations: Stanford University, School of Medicine, Stanford,
CA; Pacific Health Foundation, San Jose, CA; San Jose Gastroenterology,
San Jose, CA; and Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology,
Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, CA.
7/5/11
Reference
LH
Nguyen, S Ko, SS Wong, et al. Ethnic Differences in Viral Dominance
Patterns in Patients with Hepatitis B Virus and Hepatitis C Virus
Dual Infection. Hepatology 53(6): 1839-1845 (abstract)
June 2011.