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Long-term mortality and morbidity of transfusion-associated non-A, non-B, and type C hepatitis: A National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute collaborative study

Authors :
L B, Seeff
F B, Hollinger
H J, Alter
E C, Wright
C M, Cain
Z J, Buskell
K G, Ishak
F L, Iber
D, Toro
A, Samanta
R L, Koretz
R P, Perrillo
Z D, Goodman
R G, Knodell
G, Gitnick
T R, Morgan
E R, Schiff
S, Lasky
C, Stevens
R Z, Vlahcevic
E, Weinshel
T, Tanwandee
H J, Lin
L, Barbosa
Source :
Hepatology. 33:455-463
Publication Year :
2001
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2001.

Abstract

Persons with non-A, non-B hepatitis (cases) identified in 5 transfusion studies in the early 1970s have been followed ever since and compared for outcome with matched, transfused, non-hepatitis controls from the same studies. Previously, we reported no difference in all-cause mortality but slightly increased liver-related mortality between these cohorts after 18 years follow-up. We now present mortality and morbidity data after approximately 25 years of follow-up, restricted to the 3 studies with archived original sera. All-cause mortality was 67% among 222 hepatitis C-related cases and 65% among 377 controls (P = NS). Liver-related mortality was 4.1% and 1.3%, respectively (P = .05). Of 129 living persons with previously diagnosed transfusion-associated hepatitis (TAH), 90 (70%) had proven TAH-C, and 39 (30%), non-A-G hepatitis. Follow-up of the 90 TAH-C cases revealed viremia with chronic hepatitis in 38%, viremia without chronic hepatitis in 39%, anti-HCV without viremia in 17%, and no residual HCV markers in 7%. Thirty-five percent of 20 TAH-C patients biopsied for biochemically defined chronic hepatitis displayed cirrhosis, representing 17% of all those originally HCV-infected. Clinically evident liver disease was observed in 86% with cirrhosis but in only 23% with chronic hepatitis alone. Thirty percent of non-A, non-B hepatitis cases were unrelated to hepatitis viruses A,B,C, and G, suggesting another unidentified agent. In conclusion, all-cause mortality approximately 25 years after acute TAH-C is high but is no different between cases and controls. Liver-related mortality attributable to chronic hepatitis C, though low (

Details

ISSN :
02709139
Volume :
33
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Hepatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5f7df4c213765aff5ed3df2fd054ccb4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1053/jhep.2001.21905