| Literature DB >> 27827877 |
Johannes Hartl1, Malte H Wehmeyer2, Sven Pischke3.
Abstract
The relevance of acute hepatitis E virus (HEV) infections has been underestimated for a long time. In the past, HEV infection had been interpreted falsely as a disease limited to the tropics until the relevance of autochthonous HEV infections in the Western world became overt. Due to increased awareness, the incidence of diagnosed autochthonous HEV infections (predominantly genotype 3) in industrialized countries has risen within the last decade. The main source of infections in industrialized countries seems to be infected swine meat, while infections with the tropical HEV genotypes 1 and 2 usually are mainly transmitted fecal-orally by contaminated drinking water. In the vast majority of healthy individuals, acute HEV infection is either clinically silent or takes a benign self-limited course. In patients who develop a symptomatic HEV infection, a short prodromal phase with unspecific symptoms is followed by liver specific symptoms like jaundice, itching, uncoloured stool and darkened urine. Importantly, tropical HEV infections may lead to acute liver failure, especially in pregnant women, while autochthonous HEV infections may lead to acute-on-chronic liver failure in patients with underlying liver diseases. Immunosuppressed individuals, such as transplant recipients or human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients, are at risk for developing chronic hepatitis E, which may lead to liver fibrosis and cirrhosis in the long term. Importantly, specific treatment options for hepatitis E are not approved by the regulation authorities, but off-label ribavirin treatment seems to be effective in the treatment of chronic HEV-infection and may reduce the disease severity in patients suffering from acute liver failure.Entities:
Keywords: ACLF; HEV; decompensation; hepatitis E; liver failure
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27827877 PMCID: PMC5127013 DOI: 10.3390/v8110299
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Differences between hepatitis E virus (HEV) infections in developing and industrialized nations.
| HEV Infections in Developing Countries | HEV Infections in Tropical Countries | |
|---|---|---|
| Genotypes (GT) (distribution) | GT 1(Asia, parts of Africa) and GT 2 (Mexico, parts of Africa) | GT 3 (USA, South America, Europe, sometimes in Asia) and 4 (Asia, rarely in Europe) |
| Severity | Imported infections seem to be more severe than autochthonous ones in Europe [ | Less severe than imported infections [ |
| Risk groups for acute or acute-on-chronic liver failure | Pregnant women are at risk for development of acute liver failure [ | Elderly men, patients with underlying liver diseases [ |
| Risk groups for chronic HEV infections | No chronic hepatitis E caused by GT 1 or 2 | GT 3 and 4 can cause chronic hepatitis E in immunosuppressed individuals (transplant recipients, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients, patients with hereditary or acquired immunological disturbances, haematological patients) |
| Endemicity | Endemic: Outbreaks during conditions of decreased hygienic conditions [ | Sporadic: rare symptomatic cases, but diagnosed with emerging frequency within the last years |
Figure 1Possible courses of hepatitis E virus (HEV) infection. GT, genotype.
Figure 2Proportion of diagnosed cases of hepatitis A–E in Germany basing on data from the Robert-Koch-Institute (RKI).
Figure 3Distribution of HEV infections in different age groups (based on: Purcell and Emerson [61]).
Treatment experiences in patients with acute hepatitis E (chronic infections are not depicted).
| Course of Acute HEV-Infection | Treatment and Outcome | References |
|---|---|---|
| A patient with beginning acute on chronic liver failure due to HEV GT 3 infection | Successful treatment with 1200 mg ribavirin for 21 days | Gerolami et al. [ |
| Two patients with acute HEV GT 3 infections | Two patients (one after kidney transplantation) with acute hepatitis E were treated with ribavirin (200–1000 mg) for 10 days or 3 months | Peron et al. [ |
| 21 patients with either HEV GT 3 infections and risk factors for liver failure | 21 patients were treated with ribavirin 600–800 mg for up to 3 months. All cleared the infection. | Peron et al. [ |
| A case of severe HEV GT 1 infection | A patient from Erythrea with fulminant HEV GT 1 infection was successfully treated with ribavirin | Pischke et al. [ |
| Acute HEV GT 1 infections in four patients | Ribavirin treatment (200–600 mg/day for 3–24 weeks, median 12 weeks) led to clearance of HEV-infection | Goyal et al. [ |
| Myositis in an immunocompetent man with acute hepatitis E | Successful ribavirin treatment (400 mg each 72 h for 3 months) | Mengel et al. [ |
| Myositis and Guillain-Barre in a liver transplant recipient with acute hepatitis E | 3-month ribavirin treatment by reduction of immunosuppression, intravenous immoglobulins (1 g/kg/day for 2 days) and ribavirin therapy (400 mg/day adapted to his glomerular filtration rate of 40 mL/min). Neurological symptoms improved under therapy. | Del Bello et al. [ |
| 15 patients with neurological symptoms during acute hepatitis E | 2 patients were treated with ribavirin and intravenous immunoglobulin, 1 was treated with ribavirin only, 1 received corticosteroids, 3 were treated with immunoglobulins only and 8 were not treated. In 6 patients (40%), neurological symptoms lasted at last follow-up (range 4–126 weeks): 1 treated with ribavirin and immunoglobulins, 2 with immunoglobulins only and 3 were not treated. | Perrin et al. [ |
| Membranous nephropathy in a kidney transplant recipient | Ribavirin treatment for 3 months. Sustained viral response rapidly followed by complete remission of the nephrotic syndrome. | Taton et al. [ |
| Thrombocytopenia and membranous glomerulonephritis in an Indian patient | Steroid treatment (prednisolone 80 mg/day) stopped bleeding and improved kidney function. | Ali et al. [ |