Danish
Study Looks at Hepatitis C Sexual Transmission among HIV Positive Gay
Men
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SUMMARY:
Less than 1% of HIV positive gay and bisexual men seen at
a Danish hospital were found to have acute hepatitis C virus
(HCV) infection, according to a study presented at the American
Association for the Study of Liver Diseases "Liver Meeting"
(AASLD 2010) this week in Boston.
All those who started hepatitis C treatment within 6 months
of becoming infected achieved rapid virological response,
while 1 who started later experienced HCV relapse. |
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By
Liz Highleyman
Starting
around 2000, clinicians in large Europe cities began reporting outbreaks
of acute HCV infection
among HIV positive men who have sex with men (MSM). Numerous studies
showed that these cases -- and similar ones in Australia and the U.S.
-- were clustered within sexual networks. A variety of risk factors
have been identified, including fisting, unprotected anal sex, non-injection
drug use, and sex at public venues, but these have not been consistent
across studies.
In the present
study, researchers sought to shed further light on the incidence of
sexually transmitted acute hepatitis C among HIV positive MSM in a Danish
cohort, and to describe factors associated with HCV diagnosis and its
clinical manifestations.
Investigators
analyzed data from all 871 HIV positive MSM (out of more than 1800 total
HIV patients) who were seen at least once at the infectious disease
clinic at Rigshospitalet in Copenhagen and enrolled in the Danish HIV
Cohort during a 4-year period spanning January 2005 through December
2009.
Men were
considered to have acute hepatitis C if they tested HCV negative at
the beginning of 2005 but became positive -- according to antibody and
HCV RNA assays -- during the 4-year study period. Cases were identified
through the national HIV database, supplemented with the most recent
cases identified by treating physicians. People who reported drug use
were excluded from this analysis.
Results
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41
HIV positive gay/bisexual men had hepatitis C, 14 of whom were found
to be newly infected during the study period. |
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Only
1 such individual was excluded due to drug use. |
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This
yielded 13 cases per 871 patients during a 4-year period, for an
incidence rate of approximately 0.37% per year. |
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The
number of detected cases increased over time, from 1 in 2006, to
4 in 2007, to 3 in 2008, to 5 in 2009. |
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Most
patients (9 out of 13) were tested due to unexplained liver enzyme
elevation; only 3 were symptomatic for hepatitis. |
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The
median age at the time of HCV infection was 41 years. |
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Men
with acute HCV had generally well-preserved immune function, with
a media CD4 count of 610 cells/mm3 (range 300-1400 cells/mm3). |
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5
men with acute hepatitis C were diagnosed with other sexually transmitted
diseases during the study period (2 with syphilis, 3 with chlamydia). |
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Most
men (10 out of 13) had hard-to-treat HCV genotype 1 (the rest had
unknown genotype). |
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5
men were treated for hepatitis C; all 4 who started treatment within
6 months after HCV infection experienced rapid virological response
(RVR) -- a predictive factor for sustained virological response
(SVR): |
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2
with RVR, or undetectable HCV RNA after 4 months of therapy,
still being followed for longer-term outcomes; |
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1
with RVR at week 4 and continued undetectable HCV RNA at the
end of treatment. |
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1
with RVR and SVR, or continued undetectable HCV RNA 6 months
after completing treatment. |
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1
did not achieve RVR and subsequently experienced HCV relapse. |
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Among
the 8 men who were not treated, 3 experienced spontaneous HCV clearance
and 5 developed persistent or chronic infection. |
"We
found an incidence of 0.4% of sexually transmitted HCV among HIV positive
MSM, which is comparable to the incidence rates found in other Western
countries," the investigators concluded.
They added
that these findings "suggest a need for safer sex practices"
among MSM with discordant (1 positive, 1 negative) HCV status, and "underscores
the need for HCV testing when unexplained liver function tests are observed."
Most cases
of apparently sexually transmitted HCV among gay/bisexual men have been
people with HIV. Some experts have suggested this might be due to the
fact that HIV positive people receive regular liver function tests to
monitor for antiretroviral drug toxicity, which can catch liver problems
during acute HCV infection. Acute hepatitis C often has no symptoms
-- or ones easily mistaken for a flu -- so most people otherwise are
not diagnosed this early. The few studies that have tested all MSM at
sexual health clinics, however, have still detected acute HCV mostly
in HIV positive men.
11/5/10
Reference
TS Barfod, LH Omland, and TL Katzenstein. Incidence and characteristics
of sexually transmitted acute hepatitis C virus infection among HIV-positive
MSM in Copenhagen, Denmark during four years (2006-2009). A retrospective
cohort study. 61st Annual Meeting of the American Association for the
Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD 2010). Boston, October 29-November 2,
2010. Abstract
753.