Liver
Biopsies Indicate Persistent Inflammation and Fibrosis in HCV Antibody Positive
People with Undetectable HCV RNA
By
Liz Highleyman
People who carry antibodies indicating exposure
to hepatitis C virus (HCV), but who have undetectable
plasma HCV viral load, are generally considered to have inactive disease. Likewise,
continued undetectable plasma HCV RNA 24 months after completion of interferon-based
therapy is usually regarded as a cure.
But hidden HCV in the liver
-- even in the absence of detectable virus in the blood -- may still lead to liver
disease progression, according to a study published in the December 2008 issue
of Hepatology.
It is unclear whether HCV has been eradicated or
persists at a low level in HCV antibody positive HCV RNA negative individuals,
the study authors noted as background, and the natural history of the disease
and liver histology in such individuals are not well characterized.
Matthew
Hoare and colleagues from the U.K. studied 172 HCV antibody positive but plasma
HCV RNA negative individuals who underwent diagnostic liver biopsies between 1992
and 2000. A total of 102 patients who had any possible causes of liver injury
other than HCV were excluded. The remaining 70 participants were analyzed after
a median 7 (range 5-12) years of follow-up.
A single pathologist scored
biopsy samples according to the Ishak scoring criteria. Characterization of inflammatory
infiltrate in selected patients was done using a novel semi-quantitative technique,
and results were compared with those of patients with detectable HCV RNA and HCV
antibody negative healthy control subjects. 
Results
4 of the 70 patients (5.7%) became HCV RNA positive during follow-up.
66 patients (94.3%) remained HCV RNA negative.
5 patients (7.5%) had normal liver
biopsies.
54 of the patients with abnormal biopsies (82%) had liver
fibrosis, including 16 (24%) with moderate to advanced (stage 2 or 3) fibrosis.
Biopsies from patients with undetectable plasma HCV RNA revealed expanded portal
tracts with fewer CD4 cells and more CD8 cells than healthy HCV negative control
subjects, but indistinguishable from patients with detectable plasma HCV RNA.
Lobular CD4 staining was absent in control subjects, but present in patients with
both undetectable and detectable plasma HCV RNA (more marked in the latter).
"Non-viremic
HCV antibody positive patients have a liver biopsy that is usually abnormal,"
the study authors conclude. "Fibrosis was present in most with similar inflammatory
infiltrate to viremic cases."
The added that, "The presence of
a CD8 rich inflammatory infiltrate suggests an ongoing immune response in the
liver, supporting the view that HCV may persist in the liver in the majority of
HCV RNA negative cases."
Department of Medicine, School of Clinical
Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK; Department of Pathology, University
of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK; Clinical Microbiology and Public Health Laboratory,
Health Protection Agency, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, UK; Medical Research
Council (MRC) Cancer Cell Unit, Hutchison/MRC Research Centre, Cambridge, UK. 1/23/09
Reference M
Hoare, WT Gelson, SM Rushbrook, and others. Histological changes in HCV antibody-positive,
HCV RNA-negative subjects suggest persistent virus infection. Hepatology.
48(6): 1737-1745. December 2008. (Abstract).
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