Hepatitis C virus: Difference between revisions
From IDWiki
(→: added opportunistic screening) |
(→) |
||
Line 180: | Line 180: | ||
* Elevated ALT |
* Elevated ALT |
||
* '''Born between 1945 and 1975''' (baby boomers) |
* '''Born between 1945 and 1975''' (baby boomers) |
||
** Recommended in the US but not in Canada |
|||
==== Opportunistic screening ==== |
==== Opportunistic screening ==== |
Revision as of 13:22, 29 August 2019
Microbiology
- Enveloped single-stranded RNA virus
- NS5A and NS5B
Life Cycle
- NS5A…...
- NS5B
Epidemiology
- Worldwide about 70 million cases
- Genotype varies by geography
- Genotype 1 most common worldwide
- Genotype 1a and 1b common in Canada
- Disproportionate burden in Indigienous Canadian population in the North
- Very high burden of disease in Canada, causing more years of life lost in Ontario than any other infectious disease
- Genotype 3 more common south-east Asia and in injection drug use
- Genotype 4 common in Egypt (15% prevalence); Egypt has the highest burden in the world
- In Canada, about 245,000 chronic hepatitis C, about half are undiagnosed
- Risk factors: injection drug use (highest risk), prior transfusion, and hemophilia
- Increasing burden of disease as patients age and progress to cirrhosis
- Modes of transmission
- Injection drug use (most important population, highest risk)
- Tattoos
- Blood transfusions before 1992
- Cocaine use from blood on the straws
- Rarely, sexual transmission especially HIV-infected MSM
- Vertical transmission rare (3-5%)
- Iatrogenic or medical transmission, from multi-use vials
Pathophysiology
- In the acute phase, the viral load and liver enzymes fluctuate over months
- Anti-HCV-Ab develops at 12 weeks
- Acute phase lasts 6 months to 2 years
- Spontaneous clearance is rare after 2 years
- Anti-HCV-Ab positive and HCV RNA negative
- Repeat to confirm, but no need to follow it
- No complications, though it is a surrogate for risk behaviours
- Not protected from reinfection
- If it isn't cleared, it becomes chronic
- Lifetime risk of cirrhosis is 50-60%, with 20% having cirrhosis at 20 years
- Liver cancer develops in 1-4%
Clinical Presentation
- After exposure, may clear infection, but 70-80% become chronically infected
- Progresses slowly and asymptomatically until they develop liver fibrosis, compensated cirrhosis, then decompensated cirrhosis
- ~20-25% progress to end-stage liver disease within 20 years
Management
Decision to treat
- All individuals should be considered for antiretroviral treatment
- Assess readiness for treatment, as good adherence is necessary
- Alcohol, drug use, and mental health disorders are not containdications to treatment
Initial investigations
- Confirm active infection with HCV RNA then get genotype and subtype
- Two positive HCV RNA tests 6 months apart documents chronic infection
- May need resistance testing
- Baseline bloodwork, including CBC, liver enzymes, liver function, and creatinine
- Serology to exclude HIV and HBV
- Transferrin saturation to exclude hemochromatosis, and IgG levels to exclude autimmune hepatitis
- Baseline liver ultrasound
- If not clearly cirrhotic, assess liver fibrosis
- Bloodwork: AST:platelet ratio index (APRI), FIB-4, FibroTest
- Imaging: FibroScan
- Gold standard: biopsy
Antivirals
- Include nonstructural 3/4A (NS3/4A) serine protease (-previr), the NS5B RNA dependent RNA polymerase (-buvir) and the NS5A protein (-asvir)
- Assess drug-drug interactions with [[1]]
- PPI and Epclusa/Harvoni
- Statins require dose reduction; atorvastatin and Maviret is no-no
- Anti-epileptics except leviteracetam
- Choice of treatment regimen depends on genotype, previously-failed treatments, and cirrhosis
- All protease inhibitors (-previr) are contraindicated in decompensated cirrhosis, which refers to ascites, esophageal variceal hemorrhage, jaundice, or hepatic encephalopathy
- Sofosbuvir/velpatasvir/voxilaprevir (Vosevi) is indicated for previously-treated patients
Regimen | 1a | 1b | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ledipasvir/sofosbuvir (Harvoni) | 12 wk ± ribavirin | 12 wk | – | 12 wk + ribavirin | 12 wk | 12 wk | 12 wk |
Elbasvir/grazoprevir (Zepatier) | 12-16 wk ± ribavirin | 12 wk | – | 12 wk + sofosbuvir | 12 wk | – | – |
Sofosbuvir/velpatasvir (Epclusa) | 12 wk | 12 wk | 12 wk | 12 wk | 12 wk | 12 wk | 12 wk |
Glecaprevir/pibrentasvir (Maviret) | 8 wk | 8 wk | 8 wk | 8 wk | 8 wk | 8 wk | 8 wk |
... |
- Epclusa 12 weeks for most, now OCB covered
- Zepatier 12 weeks for G1 and G4
- Maviret 8 weeks for most; 12 weeks for cirrhosis
- Harvoni 8 weeks if uncomplicated
Experienced patients
- Changes the options, mostly longer
Non-pharmacologic management
- Counsel to avoid sharing products like needles or razors, safe sex, avoid alcohol
- Vaccinate for Hep A and B
Follow-up
- Need to confirm sustained virologic response (SVR)
Screening
- Majority of cases of chronic hepatitis C occur in baby boomers (born 1945 to 1975), though screening for this population appears to be controversial
Populations to screen
- History of injection drug use, ever
- History of incarceration
- Received healthcare where there is a lack of IPAC
- Blood products or organ transplantation before 1992 in Canada
- Born or resided in a country where prevalence of HCV is >3%
- Central, East and South Asia
- Australasia and Oceania
- Eastern Europe
- Subsaharan Africa
- North Africa or the Middle East
- Born to HCV positive mother
- History of sharing personal care items or sex with an HCV-positive person
- HIV infection
- Received hemodialysis
- Elevated ALT
- Born between 1945 and 1975 (baby boomers)
- Recommended in the US but not in Canada
Opportunistic screening
- Emergency rooms
- Hospital inpatients
- Substance use treatment clinics
Screening procedure
- Anti-HCV antibody
- If positive, proceed to HCV RNA
- Should be done annually in patients who have ongoing high-risk exposures
Further Reading
- Shah H, et al. The management of chronic hepatitis C: 2018 guideline update from the Canadian Association for the Study of the Liver. CMAJ. 2018;190(22):E677-E687.
- Hepatitis C Guidance 2018 Update: AASLD-IDSA Recommendations for Testing, Managing, and Treating Hepatitis C Virus Infection. Clin Infect Dis. 2018;67(10):1477-92.