Current Papers in Liver Disease - November, 1997
By Howard J. Worman, M. D.
Columbia University
This is a past issue of Current Papers in Liver Disease.
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Koehler, J. E., Sanchez, M. A., Garrido, C. S., Whitfeld, M. J.,
Chen, F. M., Berger, T. G., Rodriguez-Barradas, M. D., LeBoit, P. E., and
Tappero, J. W. 1997. Molecular epidemiology of Bartonella infections in
patients with bacillary angiomatosis-peliosis. New England Journal of
Medicine. 337:1876-1883.
- Peliosis hepatis is an unusual vascular proliferative lesion of the
liver and sometimes spleen. It is similar to bacillary angiomatosis which
usually involves the skin and bones. These conditions are most often
described in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus
(HIV). Both of these lesions are associated with gram-negative bacteria
of the genus Bartonella, specifically B. henselae and B.
quintana. B. henselae also causes cat scratch disease, an
inflammation of the regional lymph nodes after being scratched by a cat,
in immunocompetent individuals. In this study, the authors used the
polymerase chain reaction to determine the infecting Bartonella species in
49 patients with either bacillary angiomatosis or peliosis hepatis. Of
these patients, 53% were infected with B. henselae and 47% with
B. quintana. Peliosis hepatis was exclusively associated with
B. henselae (6 of 6 cases) whereas B. quintana was
strongly associated with lytic bone lesions (8 of 8 cases). Skin
involvement was seen in infections with both species but B.
henselae infection was significantly associated with lymph node
involvement. B. henselae infection was epidemiologically linked
to cat and flea exposure whereas B. quintana infection was
associated with low incomes, homelessness and exposure to lice. These
results show that B. henselae infection causes peliosis
hepatitis in HIV-infected individuals whereas the related species B.
quintana causes lytic bone lesions. The results also
demonstrate that infections with these two Bartonella species are
associated with different epidemiological risk factors.
Williams, I., Smith, M. G., Sinha, D., Kernan, D., Minor-Babin,
G., Garcia, E., Robertson, B. H., Di Pentima, R., and Shapiro, C. N.
1997. Hepatitis B virus transmission in an elementary school setting.
Journal of the American Medical Association. 278:2167-2169.
- This study documents transmission of hepatitis B virus (HBV) from a
student to a teacher in an elementary school. The teacher's household and
sexual contacts did not have HBV infection. One student in the classroom
was identified with HBV infection ( HBeAg positive) and the virus sequence
from this student and the teacher were identical. Of 102 of 104 other
children in the same grade who were tested at the same school, none had
serological evidence of HBV infection. The risk of HBV transmission in
schools is very low, however, this study shows that it can rarely occur.
The authors conclude that this isolated, unusual case does not suggest
that current guidelines advocating the inclusion of HBV-infected children
in day care centers or schools should be changed. They also point out
that the current strategy of vaccinating all newborns and 11 to 12
year-old children against HBV in the United States will make the already
very low risk of transmission in school settings virtually zero.
Kafri, T., Blomer, U., Peterson, D. A., Gage, F. H., and Verma, I.
M. 1997. Sustained expression of genes delivered directly into liver and
muscle by lentiviral vectors. Nature Genetics. 17:314-317.
- The major problem confronting gene tharapists, including those
interested in liver-directed gene therapy, is to produce efficient
delivery systems that provide sustained expression of the transgene. In
this paper, the authors describe sustained expression of a reporter gene
in liver and muscle by using a recombinant human lentivirus (HIV)-based
vector that can transduce non-dividing cells. The authors used green
fluorescent protein as a surrogate for a putative therapeutic protein
encoded by the transgene. Direct injection of livers in living mice with
the recombinant HIV-based vector encoding green fluorescent protein
resulted in mice with fluorescent liver cells. The fluorescent protein
was expressed in the livers for more than 22 weeks. Similar long-term
expression was observed in directly injected muscle. Additional work may
lead to the development of highly efficient lentiviral-based gene delivery
vectors that give sustained gene expression and are suitable for use in
liver-directed gene therapy.
Bennett, W. G., Inoue, Y., Beck, R., Wong, J. B., Pauker, S. G.,
and Davis, G. L. 1997. Estimates of the cost-effectiveness of a single
course of interferon alpha-2b in patients with histologically mild chronic
hepatitis C. Annals of Internal Medicine. 127:855-865
and
Kim, W. R., Poterucha, J. J., Hermans, J. E., Therneau, T. M.,
Dickson, E. R., Evans, R. W., and Gross, J. B., Jr. 1997.
Cost-effectiveness of 6 and 12 months of interferon-alpha therapy for
chronic hepatitis C. Annals of Internal Medicine.
127:866-874.
- Type I interferons are effective in the treatment of chronic hepatitis
C, however, their cost-effectiveness has not been critically analyzed.
These two paper address this issue. Both studies used Markov simulations
of outcomes in hypothetical cohorts of patients. In the study by Bennett
et al. (supported in part by a grant from the pharmaceutical company that
sells interferon alpha-2b), the authors concluded that treating patients
with "histologically mild" hepatitis C with interferon alpha-2b should
"prolong life expectancy at a reasonable marginal cost per year of life
gained, particularly in younger patients." In the study by Kim et al.
(supported in part by a grant from the US government), the authors
concluded that "from the standpoint of cost-effectiveness,
interferon-alpha therapy for 6 to 12 months may be justified in patients
with chronic hepatitis C" with the "possible exception" of patients older
than 60 years. These simulated models suggest that alpha interferons are
cost-effective treatments for younger patients with non-advanced chronic
hepatitis C.
Marcellin, P., Boyer, N., Gervais, A., Martinot, M., Pouteau, M.,
Castelnau, C., Kilani, A., Areias, J., Auperin, A., Benhamou, J. P.,
Degott, C., and Erlinger, S. 1997. Long-term histological improvement
and loss of detectable intrahepatic HCV RNA in patients with chronic
hepatitis C and sustained response to interferon-alpha therapy.
Annals of Internal Medicine. 127:875-881.
- Less than 20% of patients with chronic hepatitis C treated with
interferon alpha have a "sustained response" generally defined as normal
serum alanine aminotransferase activity and undetectable viral RNA in
serum six months after stopping therapy. This study examined the
longer-term biochemical, virological and histologic outcomes in 80 such
patients. The patients were followed for 1 to 7.6 years (mean ± SD of 4.0
± 2.0 years). During the follow-up period, 93% of patients had
persistently normal serum alanine aminotransferase activities and 96%
continued to have undetectable serum viral RNA. A comparison of liver
histology before and 1 to 6.2 years after treatment showed improvement in
94% of cases. In 62% of patients, the last liver biopsy showed normal or
nearly normal histologic finding. In 27 of 80 patients tested, liver
virus RNA was undetectable by reverse transcription-polymerase chain
reaction 1 to 5 years after treatment. These results demonstrate that
patients with chronic hepatitis who have a sustained responses to
interferon-alpha have excellent longer-term responses and improvements in
liver histology.
Gavier, B., Martinez-Gonzalez, M.-A., Riezu-Boj, J.-I., Lasarte,
J.-J., Garcia, N., Civeira, M.-P., and Prieto, J. 1997. Viremia after
one month of interferon therapy predicts treatment outcome in patients
with chronic hepatitis C. Gastroenterology. 113:1647-1653.
- It is not clear which patients with chronic hepatitis C will
experience a sustained, viremia-free response after treatment with
interferon-alpha. This study was designed to determine if undetectable
serum viremia one month into treatment predicts a sustained response after
treatment. One hundred eighty-one patients with chronic hepatitis C were
treated with interferon-alpha for 12 months. Viremia and serum
aminotransferase activities were measured at the end of one and three
months of therapy. Serum viral RNA was detected by reverse
transcription-polymerase chain reaction. A sustained response was
considered as normal serum aminotransferase activities and non-detectable
serum viral RNA for a minimum of 18 months after interferon-alpha was
discontinued. Sustained responses were obtained in 28% of subjects.
Detectable serum virus RNA at one month of therapy significantly predicted
non-response with a predictive value of 95.3 (P < 0.0001). Independent
predictors of sustained response were undetectable viremia at one month (P
< 0.001), undetectable viremia at three months (P < 0.001), younger age (P
= 0.006), nonsporadic infection (P = 0.012) and higher pretreatment
aspartate aminotransferase activities (P = 0.032). The results suggest
that patients with chronic hepatitis C are unlikely to have a sustained
response to treatment with interferon alpha if hepatitis C viral RNA is
detectable in serum by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction
after one month of therapy.
Sauer, P., Theilmann, L., Stremmel, W., Benz, C., Goetz, R. M.,
and Stielh, A. 1997. Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic stent shunt
versus sclerotherapy plus propranolol for variceal rebleeding.
Gastroenterology. 13:1623-1631.
- Bleeding from esophageal varices is a life-threatening complication of
cirrhosis. Treatments used to prevent rebleeding after a first variceal
bleed include endoscopic sclerosis of the varices (sclerotherapy),
endoscopic rubber band ligation of the varices, surgical shunt procedures,
beta-blockers and transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic stent shunting
(TIPS). Uncontrolled studies have demonstrated that TIPS is effective in
preventing recurrent variceal bleeding, however, there have been only a
few controlled studies and their conclusions have not been consistent.
This randomized study compared TIPS to endoscopic sclerotherapy plus
propranolol (a beta-blocker) in the treatment of patients with cirrhosis
after a first variceal bleed. Eighty-three patients with cirrhosis were
randomized, 42 to TIPS and 41 to sclerotherapy plus propranolol. Initial
bleeding was controlled with sclerotherapy in most subjects and
randomization performed 1 to 3 days after variceal bleeding was stopped.
After median observation times of 1.6 years in the TIPS group and 1.45
years in the sclerotherapy group, cumulative rebleeding rates were 23%
after TIPS and 57% in those subjects treated with sclerotherapy plus
propranolol (P = 0.0001). However, hepatic encephalopathy was
significantly more common in the subjects treated with TIPS (29% vs. 13%,
P = 0.041) and overall survival rates were the same in both groups (69%
vs. 67%, P = 0.62). The authors conclude that although TIPS significantly
reduces rebleeding in patients with cirrhosis after a first-time variceal
bleed, the increased risk of hepatic encephalopathy and lack of a survival
benefit make it unsuitable to recommend as an elective treatment after the
first variceal bleeding episode. TIPS, however, appears to be an
effective therapy for patients in whom endoscopic sclerotherapy fails to
control variceal bleeding.
Thompson, G. N., Hsu, B. Y. L., Pitt,J. J., Treacy, E., and
Stanley, C. A. 1997. Fasting hypoketotic coma in a child with deficiency
of mitochondrial 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA synthase. New England
Journal of Medicine. 337:1203-1207.
- Many basic metabolic processes take place in the liver. During
fasting, acetyl-CoA, which is produced by the breakdown of fats in liver
cells, is converted to ketone bodies. The ketone bodies are used for
energy production by other organs when the blood sugar level gets low.
This report describes an 11 year-old boy who developed coma secondary to
an inability to produce adequate ketone bodies during fasting.
Histological examination of the liver showed mild fatty infiltration but
no other abnormalities. Analysis of metabolic enzymes in the liver,
however, showed that the patient had only 5 to 20 percent of the normal
amount of HMG-CoA synthase, an enzyme (actually one of two similar enzymes
located in the mitochondria) essential for the production of ketone
bodies. This case report shows that deficiency of mitochondrial HMG-CoA
synthase, an enzyme necessary for the production of ketone bodies in the
liver during fasting, can lead to hypoketotic, hypoglycemic coma.
Poynard, T., Bedossa, P., Opolon, P., for the OBSVIRC, METAVIR,
CLINIVIR, and DOSIVIRC groups. 1997. Natural history of liver fibrosis
progression in patients with chronic hepatitis C. Lancet.
349:825-832.
- Some individuals infected with the hepatitis C virus (HCV) have
essentially normal lifespans and no complications of liver disease. Other
infected individuals go on to develop cirrhosis. The natural history of
HCV infection is poorly understood and it is unclear which infected
individuals have an increased risk of developing cirrhosis. In this
study, the authors recruited 2,235 patients from several hepatitis C study
groups. All of the patients had a single liver biopsy consistent with
chronic hepatitis C prior to treatment with any agent. The authors
assessed the effects of the following factors on liver fibrosis: sex, age
at infection, alcohol consumption, HCV genotype, HCV viremia, cause of
infection and histological activity. Three of these factors were
independently associated with an increased rate of fibrosis progression:
age at infection greater than 40 years, male sex and consumption of 50 g
or more of alcohol a day. There was no association between fibrosis
progression and HCV genotype. The authors also estimated that, without
treatment, 33% of patients had an expected median time to cirrhosis of <20
years and that 31% will not progress to cirrhosis in 50 or more years.
Although complicated by the use of only single liver biopsies and some
uncertainty about the time of HCV infection, the results indicate that
male sex, older age at infection and significant alcohol consumption
predict a worse prognosis for individuals with chronic hepatitis C.
Bonis, P. A. L., Ioannidis, J. P. A., Cappelleri, J. C., Kaplan,
M. M., and Lau, J. 1997. Correlation of biochemical response to
interferon alfa with histological improvement in hepatitis C: a
meta-analysis of diagnostic test characteristics. Hepatology.
26:1035-1044.
- In current practice, serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) activity and
viremia are used to follow patients with chronic hepatitis C treated with
interferon-alpha. These parameters may not accurately reflect liver
histology. This study was a meta-analysis of 15 previously published
studies in which liver biopsies were performed before and after treatment.
Two separate criteria for "histological response" were considered by the
authors: an improvement in the Knodell or other scoring system of greater
than or equal to 50% (strict criteria) of any improvement (less stringent
criteria). When strict criteria were considered, 28% of patients showed
improvement after treatment. The sensitivity and specificity of serum ALT
activity normalization for determining this response were 70% and 66%,
respectively. When less stringent criteria for histological response were
considered, 62% of patients improved after treatment. The sensitivity and
specificity of serum ALT activity normalization for this response were 55%
and 77%, respectively. As many as 51% of treated patients showed some
histological improvement despite failure to normalize serum ALT activity.
These results show that normalization of serum ALT activity after
interferon-alpha treatment does not always predict histological
improvement in patients with chronic hepatitis C.
Current Papers in Liver Disease/Howard J.
Worman, M. D./hjw@columbia.edu