HIV
and Hepatitis.com Coverage of the 14th
Annual Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (14th CROI) February
25 - 28, 2007, Los Angeles, CA
HCV
May Be Sexually Transmitted in HIV Negative as Well as HIV Positive Men
In
recent years, outbreaks of apparently sexually transmitted hepatitis C virus (HCV)
infection have been reported in London and Brighton in the UK and in a few European
cities. In almost all cases, these acute HCV infections have occurred in HIV positive
gay and bisexual men.
At
the 14th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections in Los Angeles
this week, however, researchers from Brighton reported that HCV screening of all
men attending a large sexually transmitted disease (STD) clinic revealed that
about one-third of men with incident HCV infection were either HIV negative or
of unknown HIV serostatus.
Such
cases may have gone unnoticed in the past because HIV negative men who have sex
with men (MSM) typically do not receive routine HCV antibody screening - unlike
HIV positive individuals, for whom treatment guidelines recommend HCV screening
and regular liver enzyme monitoring to detect antiretroviral drug toxicity. Due
to the high HCV infection rate in Brighton, all MSM attending the STD/HIV clinic
since 2000 have been tested for HCV, regardless of HIV status.
Results
Out of a total of clinic population of 7169 patients, 3907 had at least one negative
HCV antibody test.
Men
who reported current or past injection drug use were excluded from analysis.
Among
those with an initial negative HCV test, 25 men were newly diagnosed with HCV
during 2000-2006:
- 16 HIV positive; - 5 HIV negative; - 4 of unknown
HIV serostatus.
Of
the 9 men who initially were HIV negative or of unknown serostatus, 8 went on
to test HIV positive.
HIV
positive men were over 13 times more likely to have an incident HCV diagnosis
compared with HIV negative men (adjusted risk ratio 13.59; P = 0.0001)
Men
of unknown HIV serostatus had a similar HCV infection rate to that of HIV negative
men (adjusted risk ratio 1.92; P = non-significant).
Overall,
the rate of incident HCV diagnosis (among men of any HIV serostatus) increased
over time:
-The rate rose from none during 2000-2002 to nearly 4 cases
per 1000 person-years in 2006.
- From 2002 on, the incidence rate rose
by 56% per year.
oIncident HCV diagnosis was associated with several risk
factors, in agreement with past reports:
- fisting; - unprotected anal
intercourse; - multiple sex partners; - infection with other STDs; -
recreational non-injection drug use.
Conclusion
The
researchers concluded that, "There has been, and continues to be, a significant
increase in acute HCV in MSM. Contrary to current evidence, this phenomenon is
not exclusively in MSM with HIV."
They added that their findings suggest
that all gay and bisexual men attending STD clinics should be routinely screened
for HCV.
03/02/07
Reference M
Fisher, D Richardson, C Sabin. Acute Hepatitis C in Men Who Have Sex With Men
Is Not Confined to Those Infected with HIV, and Their Number Continues to Increase.
14th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections. Los Angeles, February
25-28, 2007. Abstract 130.