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Viral Hepatitis ( Useful Points for GPs in W Herts) Dr Alistair King Consultant Gastroenterologist Hemel Hempstead General Hospital
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New viral hepatitis service! West Herts Chronic hepatitis B and hepatitis C All referrals (Watford, Hemel, St Albans) AK Local care, rather than referral to Royal Free
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Hepatitis B Hepadnavirus Double strand DNA virus Massively overproduces envelope proteins (HBsAg, Australia antigen)
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Modes of transmission Sexual Blood products IVDU Vertical High endemnicity Transmission occurs at birth
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Acute infection Incubation 60-180 days Self limiting jaundiced illness HBsAg, HBeAg, HBV DNA detectable IgM anti-HBc. Anti-HBs confirms resolving infection Raised ALT (>AST) & Bilirubin Should resolve within 6 months
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Fulminant hepatic failure 1% of cases Encephalopathy within 8/52 of Sx Prolonged PT (>17s) or INR (>=1.5)
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Management (acute) Rest/supportive Avoid EtOH Counsel re contacts Watch for FHF Check Hep B serology in 6/12- Should be HBsAg-ve, HBsAb+ve
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Immunity HBsAb = immune Reassure ++ no further action HBsAb+ve, HBcAb+ve = immune 2 o to past infection HBsAb+ve, HBcAb-ve = immune 2 o to vaccination
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Serological course
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Chronic hepatitis B 350 million worldwide UK prevalence < 1% risk cirrhosis, decompensation, HCC 15-40% develop serious sequellae 3 potentially successive phases:
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1. Immunotolerant phase HBV-DNA levels high HBsAg+ve, HBeAg+ve, normal/mildly deranged LFT Patient asymptomatic Often perinatally acquired
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2. Immunoactive phase HBsAg+ve HBV-DNA levels decrease Transaminases increase Patient may develop symptoms HBeAg HBeAb seroconversion
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‘Inactive carrier state’ HBV DNA<10 5 HBsAg+ve, HBeAg-ve, normal LFTs Low infectivity, little inflammation Low risk of complications BUT- DNA levels may fluctuate (15%) RARELY HBsAg HBsAb seroconversion (1-2% per year)
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Inactive carrier state Do they need follow-up? Normal LFT Antenatal screening, occupational health Benign course 20-30% of patients may reactivate Cirrhosis HCC (+/- cirrhosis)
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Precore mutants 1-5% of patients with HBeAg HBeAb seroconversion HBV-DNA levels >10 5 HBsAg+ve, HBeAg-ve, elevated transaminases Due to mutation in viral precore region which prevents production of HBeAg Otherwise behave like ‘immunoactive’ chronic hep B
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Cirrhosis 2-5.5% per year – HBeAg+ve 8-10% per year– HBeAg-ve chronic hep Diagnosed 41-52yrs 3.3% decompensate (ascites, jaundice, variceal bleed) HCC Without cirrhosis 0.2-0.6% per year With cirrhosis 2% per year
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Mortallity 5-year mortallity: Without cirrhosis 0-2% Compensated cirrhosis 14-20% Decompensated 70-86% HCC and complications of cirrhosis
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Hepatitis D ‘Incomplete’ virus Coinfection/superinfection Superinfection acute flare Suppresses hep B chronic hep D Drug users Mediterranean
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What do we do? (HBsAg+ve) Monitor LFT Lifestyle advice ‘Screen’ for development of HCC AFP +/- U/S 6 monthly Treatment: Interferon Lamivudine Adefovir
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Lifestyle advice Alcohol Drug users Hep A vaccination Screening/vaccination of close contacts Barrier contraception, toothbrushes, razors etc Occupations
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Treatment Not for: Acute hep B (FHF liver transplant) Inactive carrier state/mild disease Decompensated cirrhosis May be considered HBV-DNA>10 5, persistently elevated transaminases 2xULN (>6 months)
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Antenatal screening All mothers offered Hep B, HIV, Rubella, Syphillis screening in antenatal clinic 95-98% uptake HBsAg+ves Vaccinate babies at birth HBIG
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Interferon (IFN ) Previously ‘first line’ Cons: Sc injection 5mU daily for 6mths-2yrs Poorly tolerated Suppress viral replication but rarely induce seroconversion
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Lamivudine Pros: Well tolerated/non-toxic Suppresses viral replication/DNA levels Rarely may induce seroconversion Cons: Viral resistance develops (YMDD) May also provoke HIV resistance in co- infected patients
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Adefovir dipivoxil Pros: Well tolerated and effective Little resistance Cons: Expensive Can induce renal failure
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Hepatitis C Flavivirus (RNA) NANB Discovered 1989 200,000 people in UK 38,000 diagnosed No vaccine
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Who gets it?
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‘The silent epidemic’ Only 10% report jaundiced illness 80% go chronic Nonspecific Sx (lethargy, myalgia, RUQ pain) Routine screening Cirrhosis/HCC
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Clinical course HCV infection 20% PCR-ve80% chronic 7 years 30% cirrhotic 20 yrs50% cirrhotic5% HCC 30yrs 15% death
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What do we do? (HCV Ab+ve) Exclude other causes of CLD HCV-RNA PCR Lifestyle advice If RNA+ve and for treatment liver biopsy Treatment: PEG-IFN + Ribavirin
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Lifestyle advice Avoid EtOH Avoid blood donation, needle sharing ?Barrier methods: Monogamous relationships- No (<5%) Multiple sexual partners- Yes (?11.7%) Vertical transmission rare Breast feeding OK
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Who do we treat? No: HCV-RNA PCR-ve Mild hepatitis on Bx Decompensated cirrhosis Current EtOH++, IVDU Yes: HCV-RNA PCR+ve, deranged LFT Moderate/severe hepatitis on Bx Fibrosis
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Treatment PEG interferon weekly + ribavirin bd Genotype 1 (+4): 48weeks (recheck PCR 12 weeks) Genotype 2,3: 24 weeks Monitor FBC Ribavirin haemolysis IFN WCC, plt
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Response rates Sustained viral response: Genotype 1: 50% Genotype 2,3: 80% May be worse if: Male Older Infected a long time Cirrhotic HIV coinfection
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Cost PEG-IFN: £120-150/wk Ribavirin: £15-20/day 24 weeks therapy: £5,500-£7,000 48 weeks therapy: £11,000-£14,000 BUT: Probably cost effective
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Other follow up PCR negatives and responders Yearly LFT and PCR Non-responders Regular LFT, PCR, monitoring Re-biopsy after 3 years Other treatments may become available HCV/HIV co-infection Aggressive course cirrhosis
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CMO’s infectious diseases strategy Identified as needing ‘intensified action’ Prevention Diagnosis Treatment Emphasis on local services
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Summary Chronic HBV relatively rare and need for treatment rarer Most are ‘inactive carrier state’ HCV common – IVDU – Rx makes pharmaco-economic sense Cirrhosis/HCC transplantation/death New W Herts clinic for viral hepatitis
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Questions?
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