| Literature DB >> 22164334 |
Marcello Persico1, Savino Bruno, Andrea Costantino, Marta Mazza, Piero Luigi Almasio.
Abstract
NATURAL HISTORY OF HCV RELATED CHRONIC HEPATITIS IS INFLUENCED AND MODIFIED BY MANY FACTORS: virus features, coinfections and host characteristics. In particular, a peculiar genetic background of the host by conditioning the occurrence of intracellular metabolic derangements (i.e., insulin resistance) might contribute to accelerate the rate of progression to cirrhosis and eventually the occurrence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and death. Likely, direct interplays between virus genotype and host genetic background might be hypothesized at this level. Morbidity and mortality in cirrhosis is primarily associated with complications of liver cirrhosis (ascites, hepatic encephalopathy, jaundice, and gastroesophageal bleeding) and HCC occurrence. Therefore the main goal of therapy is to clear viral infection and decrease liver necro-inflammation that directly relates to development of cirrhosis and HCC. Among patients treated with Interferon-based therapy, those with sustained viral response showed a significant reduction of progression to cirrhosis and development of HCC. However, a residual risk of hepatocellular carcinoma still remains indicating the need for careful follow-up using ultrasonography every six months in cirrhotic patients, even in those showing persistently normal ALT and undetectable HCV RNA levels after antiviral therapy.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22164334 PMCID: PMC3230116 DOI: 10.4061/2011/314301
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hepatol
Figure 1Natural history of chronic HCV infection.
Cumulative rate of development of cirrhosis in patients with HCV-related chronic hepatitis according to sustained viral response (SVR); n/a: not available.
| Author | Reference | Treated patients | Followup (years) | Rate of cirrhosis after SVR | Rate of cirrhosis in absence of SVR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marcellin et al. | [ | 450 | 1–7.6 | 0/75 | n/a |
| Sata et al. | [ | 63 | 0.6–3.8 | 0/25 | 9/38 (23.7%) |
| Lau et al. | [ | 10 | 10–13 | 0/5 | 2/5 (40.0%) |
| Cammà et al. | [ | 62 | 0.7–9 | 0/62 | 5/360 (1.3%) |
| Ajello et al. | [ | 31 | 10 | 1/10 (10.0%) | n/a |
| Morisco et al. | [ | 191 | 4 | 0/39 | 12/115 (10.4%) |
| Gallego et al. | [ | 79 | 4 | 0/11 | 33/87 (37.9%) |
| Giannini et al. | [ | 36 | 1–6 | 0/15 | 3/21 (14.3%) |
| Shindo et al. | [ | 250 | 8–11 | 0/67 | 62/183 (33.9%) |
| Swain et al. | [ | 997 | 8 | 0/989 | 8/997 (0.8%) |
| Veldt et al. | [ | 343 | 1.6 | 6/110 (5.5%) | 3/15 (20%) |
| Ciancio et al. | [ | 97 | 7 | 0/83 | 3/86 (3.5%) |
| Chavalitdhamrong and Tanwandee | [ | n/a | 3 | 0/171 | 27/171 (15.8%) |
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