The incidence and contributing factors of cirrhosis developing in patients with chronic type B hepatitis were assessed prospectively in 684 clinicopathologically verified patients, of which 509 were HBeAg positive and 175 were anti-HBe positive at entry into the study. During an average follow-up pe
A prospective study of the rate of progression in compensated, histologically advanced chronic hepatitis C
β Scribed by Jules L. Dienstag; Marc G. Ghany; Timothy R. Morgan; Adrian M. Di Bisceglie; Herbert L. Bonkovsky; Hae-Young Kim; Leonard B. Seeff; Gyongyi Szabo; Elizabeth C. Wright; Richard K. Sterling; Gregory T. Everson; Karen L. Lindsay; William M. Lee; Anna S. Lok; Chihiro Morishima; Anne M. Stoddard; James E. Everhart; for the HALT-C Trial Group
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 431 KB
- Volume
- 54
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0270-9139
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The incidence of liver disease progression among subjects with histologically advanced but compensated chronic hepatitis C is incomplete. The Hepatitis C Antiviral Long-term Treatment against Cirrhosis Trial was a randomized study of 3.5 years of maintenance peginterferon treatment on liver disease progression among patients who had not cleared virus on peginterferon and ribavirin therapy. Patients were followed subsequently off therapy. Because maintenance peginterferon treatment did not alter liver disease progression, we analyzed treated and control patients together. Among 1,050 subjects (60% advanced fibrosis, 40% cirrhosis), we determined the rate of progression to cirrhosis over 4 years and of clinical outcomes over 8 years. Among patients with fibrosis, the incidence of cirrhosis was 9.9% per year. Six hundred seventy-nine clinical outcomes occurred among 329 subjects. Initial clinical outcomes occurred more frequently among subjects with cirrhosis (7.5% per year) than subjects with fibrosis (3.3% per year) (P < 0.0001). Child-Turcotte-Pugh (CTP) score !7 was the most common first outcome, followed by hepatocellular carcinoma. Following occurrence of a CTP score !7, the rate of subsequent events increased to 12.9% per year, including a death rate of 10% per year. Age and sex did not influence outcome rates. Baseline platelet count was a strong predictor of all clinical outcomes. During the 8 years of follow-up, death or liver transplantation occurred among 12.2% of patients with advanced fibrosis and 31.5% of those with cirrhosis. Conclusion: Among patients with advanced hepatitis C who failed peginterferon and ribavirin therapy, the rate of liver-related outcomes, including death and liver transplantation, is high, especially once the CTP score reaches at least 7. (HEPATOLOGY 2011;54:396-405
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