European investigators and activists have developed
recommendations for the management of acute hepatitis C infection in patients
with HIV.
Published in the online edition of AIDS, they cover the diagnosis, epidemiology, natural history and
treatment of the infection.
It is estimated that approximately a third of HIV-positive
patients in Europe are co-infected with hepatitis C. The epidemic of sexually
transmitted hepatitis C among HIV-positive gay men has lead to a renewed focus
on the infection. Therefore in May 2010 doctors, researchers and activists from
a number of European-wide bodies met in Paris to develop consensus guidelines
about the management of acute hepatitis C infection.
Their recommendations concerned:
Definition of acute hepatitis C infection.
Screening for hepatitis C.
Risk reduction advice.
Natural history.
Treatment during acute infection.
Acute hepatitis C is defined as the first six months after
infection with the virus. Many people do not develop symptoms when they first
contract the virus, and delayed antibody responses have been seen in a minority
of HIV-positive patients.
Preferred European criteria for the diagnosis of acute
infection are:
1.
Positive anti-hepatitis C IgG with or without
detectable hepatitis C viral load and a negative hepatitis C antibody test in
the previous twelve months.
Or:
2.
Positive hepatitis C viral load and a documented
hepatitis C negative viral load and negative anti-hepatitis C IgG in the
previous year.
However, in circumstances where previous test results are
unavailable, acute hepatitis C can be diagnosed if a patient has detectable
hepatitis C viral load, with:
1.
An increase in ALT levels greater than ten times
the upper limit of normal, or five times the upper limit if liver function was
normal within the previous twelve months.
2.
Negative for both hepatitis A and hepatitis B and
all other causes of liver disease have been excluded.
Recommendations are also made concerning the screening of
individuals for acute infection. These are:
1.
All patients newly diagnosed with HIV should
have a hepatitis C antibody test.
2.
HIV-positive gay men at risk of hepatitis C
should have their ALTs measured every six months and should also have an annual
hepatitis C antibody test.
3.
Patients with an incident sexually transmitted
infection (STI), as well as those who inject drugs, should be screened for
acute hepatitis C three months after the diagnosis of the STI or the last possible exposure to the
virus.
4.
Individuals with suspected acute infection are
recommended to have a their hepatitis C viral load monitored using nucleic acid
testing.
There is currently some uncertainty about the exact mode
of hepatitis C transmission in HIV-positive gay men. However, the following
risk-reduction recommendations are made:
1.
Advice should include discussions of hepatitis C
transmission and fisting, recreational drug use, group sex, use of sex toys,
unprotected sex, traumatic sex, sharing injecting equipment, and risks from
blood-to-blood contact.
2.
Information about hepatitis C risk reduction
should be given to all HIV-positive individuals after their diagnosis and then
at regular intervals. Patients with newly diagnosed hepatitis C should also be
counselled about risk reduction.
A proportion of individuals naturally clear hepatitis C
infection without the need for treatment. The consensus recommendations made
the following observations about the natural history of the infection:
1.
HIV-positive patients are at greater risk of
developing chronic hepatitis C infection.
2.
Studies suggest that between 0% and 40% of
HIV-positive patients spontaneously clear hepatitis C during the acute phase.
3.
Factors associated with spontaneous clearance
include female sex; sexual transmission; infection with hepatitis B; jaundice;
and higher peak ALT levels.
4.
An early decline in hepatitis C viral load, four
to eight weeks after infection is also associated with spontaneous clearance.
Good response rates to hepatitis C therapy have been seen in
HIV-positive patients who start such treatment within a year of contracting the
virus. Therefore recommendations are offered regarding the monitoring of the
infection and test results that should act as a prompt to initiate treatment.
1.
Hepatitis C viral load should be measured when a
patient is first diagnosed and then four weeks later.
2.
Treatment should be offered if viral load has
not fallen by 2 log10 copies/ml at the four week monitoring interval,
or if a patient still has a detectable hepatitis viral load twelve weeks after
acute infection was diagnosed.
3.
In circumstances where patients spontaneously
clear the virus, a repeat measurement of viral load should be made after 48
weeks.