HIV and Hepatitis.com Coverage of the
14th Annual Conference on Retroviruses
and Opportunistic Infections (14th CROI)

February 25 - 28, 2007, Los Angeles, CA

HBV Less Likely than HCV to Cause Liver Disease Progression and Death in People with HIV

By Liz Highleyman

It is well known that both hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) can cause advanced liver disease, including cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), and this appears to occur more rapidly among people with HIV. However, less is known about the comparative outcomes of hepatitis B and C in HIV positive individuals -- an issue explored in 2 studies reported at the 14th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections this past February.

Study 1

Hepatitis B Virus

In the first study, researchers analyzed all HIV positive patients coinfected with HBV (positive for HBV surface antigen) or HCV (detectable HCV antibodies or HCV RNA) in the Netherlands ATHENA observational HIV cohort. Data on liver disease were systematically collected from January 2001 onward.

Results

Of 12257 HIV-infected patients in the cohort, 1129 (9%) were HCV coinfected and 815 (7%) were HBV coinfected.

31 patients (0.3%) triply infected with HIV, HBV, and HCV were excluded from the analysis.

Among the coinfected patients, 31 (2%) developed liver fibrosis, 71 (4%) developed liver cirrhoses, and 5 (0.3%) developed HCC between 2001 and 2006.

246 coinfected patients (13%) died during follow-up.

The risk of liver disease was nearly twice as high in HCV-HIV coinfected patients compared with HBV-HIV coinfected individuals (adjusted risk ratio 1.93).

HIV-HCV coinfected patients also had significantly shorter survival than HIV-HBV coinfected individuals.

Time to death did not differ between patients with and without HBV.

The researchers concluded that, "HCV coinfected HAART-treated patients have a faster progression to hepatitis-related liver disease and to death than HBV-HIV coinfected patients, suggesting that progression to liver-related disease may be faster in HCV coinfected patients."

HIV Monitoring Fndn, Academic Med Ctr, Univ of Amsterdam, Netherlands; Ctr for Immunity and Infection, Academic Med Ctr, Univ of Amsterdam, Netherlands; Imperial Coll Sch of Med, London, UK.

Link to study abstract

Study 2

In the second study, researchers in Texas analyzed serum samples from 129 coinfected patients seen at an inner city HIV clinic; about half had both baseline and follow-up samples.

45 patients had HIV-HBV coinfection, 43 had HIV-HCV confection, and 41 had HIV-HBV-HCV triple infection.

Triply infected patients had significantly lower HBV viral loads compared with HIV-HBV coinfected patients.

The triply infected group was more likely to also have hepatitis delta virus (HDV).

Triply infected patients were more likely to have cirrhosis (31%) than those with HIV-HBV coinfection (9%) or HIV-HCV coinfection (10%).

A higher proportion of deaths were seen in HIV-HCV coinfected patients (33%) compared with HIV-HBV coinfected (20%) and triply infected (23%) patients.


"The presence of HCV in those with triple infection appears to diminish HBV DNA levels as compared with the HIV/HBV setting but the reverse is not true," the researchers concluded. "Triply infected persons appear to have more severe disease and are more likely to have delta virus, possibly due to injection drug use and should be evaluated for these features."

Univ of Texas Southwestern Med Ctr, Dallas, TX.


Link to PDF of poster

Link to full study abstract


04/06/07

References

C Smit, L Gras, A van Sighem, and others. Increased Progression to Liver Disease and Death in HIV/HCV than in HBV-co-infected Patients. 14th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections; February 25-28, 2007; Los Angeles, California. Abstract 932 (poster).

M Jain, R Joshi, N Attar, and others. Comparison of Triple Infection with HIV/HBV/HCV to HIV/HCV and HIV/HBV. 14th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections; February 25-28, 2007; Los Angeles, California. Abstract 933 (poster).












































14th croi