| 5. Chronic Hepatitis
/ V.G. Bain and M. Ma |
page
492 |
The term chronic
hepatitis means active, ongoing inflammation of the liver persisting
for more than six months that is detectable by biochemical and histologic
means. It does not imply an etiology. The biochemical hallmark of chronic
hepatitis is an increased serum aminotransferase (AST and ALT) with
minimal elevation of alkaline phosphatase. When the inflammation is severe
and/or prolonged, hepatic dysfunction may become apparent with an increase
in serum bilirubin and INR/prothrombin time, and a decrease in serum
albumin. Typically, biochemical tests are used to identify and follow
patients with chronic hepatitis, while liver biopsies serve to more
precisely define the nature of the chronic hepatitis and provide useful
information regarding the extent of damage and prognosis.
Histologically, chronic hepatitis is characterized by
infiltration of the portal tracts by inflammatory cells. These cells are
predominantly mononuclear cells including lymphocytes, monocytes and
plasma cells. Chronic hepatitis is designated as mild when the infiltrate
is confined to the portal triad (Figure
9). It is designated as moderately severe chronic hepatitis (Figure
10) when the infiltrate extends into the parenchyma
(piecemeal necrosis) and when it extends to adjacent portal triads
(bridging). The inflammatory process can also "bridge" from the
portal tract to the central vein. Severe chronic hepatitis is associated
with multilobular or confluent necrosis and is much more likely to
progress to cirrhosis. The amount of fibrosis is staged separately. These
newer terms, mild, moderate and severe chronic hepatitis,
replace the older terminology including chronic persistent hepatitis
and chronic active hepatitis, which are still frequently mentioned
in older textbooks.
By far, the commonest cause of chronic hepatitis is
viral infections of the liver. Other causes include autoimmune hepatitis,
drug-induced hepatitis, Wilson's disease, a1-antitrypsin
deficiency and steatohepatitis. Primary biliary cirrhosis and primary
sclerosing cholangitis may occasionally mimic chronic hepatitis, but are
not usually classified as such. An approach to help determine the etiology
of chronic hepatitis is summarized in Table
7.
| 5.1 Chronic Viral
Hepatitis |
page
494 |
5.1.1 GENERAL
CONSIDERATIONS
Of the known viral
infections of the liver, HBV, HCV, HDV and HGV can cause chronic liver
disease; HBV and HCV make up the vast majority of these cases. A careful
history is most helpful in determining the cause of chronic hepatitis (Table
7). In most cases, selected laboratory tests will provide the
confirmation of diagnosis. Sometimes liver biopsy is required to identify
the cause of chronic hepatitis. The liver biopsy will also provide
important information about the extent of damage and current activity.
TABLE
7. Role of history in diagnosis of chronic hepatitis
|
| Etiology |
Key points in
the history |
Useful lab
tests |
|
| Hepatitis B |
Sexual
history (homosexuality, use of prostitute services, promiscuity),
family history, country of origin, IV drug use |
HBsAg
- if positive, measure HBeAg, HBeAb and HBV-DNA
(if available) |
| Hepatitis C |
Blood
transfusions (pre-1990), IV drug use (even once), tattoos, ear or
body piercing, sexual promiscuity, HCV-positive partner,
incarceration |
anti-HCV |
| Autoimmune
hepatitis |
Usually young
or middle-aged females, often chronic symptoms - especially fatigue
(but may present acutely), other autoimmune disease (e.g., thyroid) |
Quantitative
immuno-globulins
Antinuclear antibodies
Smooth-muscle antibody |
| Drug-induced
hepatitis |
Careful
history of all drugs and herbs: common offenders include isoniazid,
nitrofurantoin, NSAIDs, sulfa drugs |
None |
| Wilson's
disease |
Family
history, neurologic or psychiatric symptoms in
children or young adults |
Serum
ceruloplasmin
24-hr urinary copper |
| a1-antitrypsin
deficiency |
Family
history of liver or lung disease (emphysema) |
a1-antitrypsin
levels and Pi typing |
| Nonalcoholic
steatohepatitis (NASH) |
Obesity -
especially recent weight gain, diabetes mellitus, corticosteroids,
intestinal by-pass surgery |
Glucose Hgb
Alc
Abdominal ultrasound |
|
5.1.2 HEPATITIS B
VIRUS
5.1.2.1 Evolution to
chronic liver disease
A number of factors
determine whether an individual will clear an acute HBV infection or
progress to a chronic carrier state. Of these, the age at infection is
most important, with carrier rates of greater than 90% occurring in
vertically infected newborns as compared to less than 5% in adults. The
immunologic status of the host is also important, with immunocompromised
individuals (e.g., HIV, renal failure, post-transplant) being more
likely to become chronic carriers. The severity of the acute disease has
also been correlated with outcome. In general, the milder the acute
illness the more likely that progression to chronic liver disease will
occur. Presumably, individuals with mild acute disease are those with a
suboptimal immunologic response to the virus, whereas patients with more
severe acute disease are manifesting a prompt and effective immunologic
attack on hepatocytes harboring HBV.
5.1.2.2 Presentation
The majority of patients
with chronic type B hepatitis are asymptomatic or have mild fatigue
only. The patients might give a history of risk-taking behavior or a
family history of hepatitis B infection. Liver enzyme abnormalities
discovered incidentally frequently alert the physician to the
possibility of underlying viral infection. Screening of family and
sexual contacts of known cases will often discover additional cases.
5.1.2.3 Diagnosis
By the strictest
definition, a patient is not a chronic HBV carrier until the HBsAg
test is found to be positive for six months, but the diagnosis is often
suspected much earlier.
It is important not to be confused by other viral
markers of previous hepatitis B exposure (Table 4). Antibodies to
HBsAg (anti-HBs) indicate immunity against HBV and may be
acquired either after vaccination or after clearance of HBV infection.
On the other hand, the presence of HBeAg and HBV-DNA
indicates active HBV replication. The level of HBV-DNA correlates with
the amount of virus present in the circulation. When HBV-DNA is strongly
positive, there is a high viral load, which indicates a high degree of
infectivity (all physiologic fluids are potentially infectious). A
negative HBV-DNA indicates very low or absent infectivity.
Unfortunately, serum HBV-DNA testing is not widely available. If HBeAg
is negative there is usually lower infectivity. Positive antibodies to
the core antigen (anti-HBc) indicate exposure to the virus
only and are therefore of very limited use in patient assessment. The
presence of IgM and anti-HBc suggests recent HBV exposure. In
chronic HBV infection the anti-HBc is is positive but the IgM anti-HBc
is negative because exposure took place more than six months previously.
The exception is in patients with reactivation of chronic hepatitis B
who may also be IgM anti-HBc positive, which reduces the
usefulness of this test in the diagnosis of acute HBV infection.
5.1.2.4 Natural
history
The natural history of
chronic HBV infection has been well defined. The first six months of the
illness represent the acute hepatitis phase of the infection. This acute
phase is not often seen in chronically infected patients who have
contracted the virus at birth or in early childhood. Chronic hepatitis
has three phases, termed the replicative, inflammatory and inactive
phases (Figure
11). During the replicative phase, HBeAg is
positive as is HBV-DNA, indicating high levels of viral replication.
Despite this, the aminotransferases are normal or near normal and the
liver biopsy is relatively inactive. For unknown reasons, patients may
then enter the inflammatory phase in which their immune system now
recognizes those hepatocytes harboring virus and begins to attack them.
Accordingly, the aminotransferase becomes elevated and the biopsy shows
chronic hepatitis, often of a severe degree The level of viral
replication as measured by the HBV-DNA will decline. If the patient has
successfully cleared viral replication, he or she will enter an inactive
phase characterized by normalization of the aminotransferases and
relative inactivity on the liver biopsy. HBeAg will be
cleared and anti-HBe will form (seroconversion).
It is the severity and duration of the inflammatory
phase that determine whether a patient will develop cirrhosis. This
progression of chronic hepatitis to cirrhosis occurs in 20-30% of all
chronic hepatitis B patients. Even patients who successfully enter the
inactive phase are still at risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (relative
risk greater than 100 vs the general population). Those with cirrhosis
are at highest risk. Screening for hepatocellular carcinoma has been
recommended in chronic carriers by performing a serum a-fetoprotein
and an abdominal ultrasound each 6 to 12 months; more recently, however,
the efficacy and cost benefit of this approach have been questioned. The
problem is that even cases discovered by screening are often beyond cure
by resection or liver transplantation.
5.1.2.5 Treatment
There are few therapeutic
options for the treatment of patients with chronic hepatitis B, although
different agents have been tried. Of these agents, only interferon-a
has been licensed for use. In most studies, 30-40% of chronic hepatitis
B patients successfully respond to interferon treatment with a loss of
serologic markers of viral replication (HBeAg and HBV-DNA).
A minority of responders will also lose all evidence of infection (clear
HBsAg) during treatment, but up to 50% will become HBsAg
negative during the first five years of follow-up. The relapse rate
following discontinuation of therapy is less than 15%.
Since the majority of patients do not respond to
interferon, an important question is, which patients warrant a trial of
therapy? Those most likely to respond include patients who acquired
their infection during adulthood, females, patients with elevated ALT
and low HBV-DNA levels, those with active hepatic inflammation on
biopsy, patients who are HIV antibody negative and those who are anti-HDV
negative. Stated another way, patients in the inflammatory phase (Figure
11) are most likely to benefit from interferon.
A number of new medications are being tested for
efficacy against HBV. Lamivudine is a new nucleoside analogue with very
potent antiviral effect against HBV. Its role in treatment of chronic
hepatitis B is currently being defined in clinical trials; but it may
find a use in combination with interferon.
5.1.2.6 Prevention
Active immunization is
important to prevent transmission of HBV infection from a chronic
carrier to sexual and family contacts. The safety of the vaccine is well
established. It should be given to all high-risk groups as a minimum,
but ultimately the goal is universal vaccination. As universal
vaccination becomes a reality, prophylaxis with hyperimmune hepatitis B
globulins for HBV contacts will become unnecessary.
5.1.3 HEPATITIS C
VIRUS
Chronic hepatitis C virus
has become the commonest type of chronic viral hepatitis in most areas.
The identified cases may represent only the tip of the iceberg, with
most cases still undiagnosed. Many cases are identified after
investigation of raised liver enzymes in asymptomatic individuals or by
the Red Cross during screening of blood donors. Other patients present
to physicians with fatigue, malaise and abnormal liver enzymes.
5.1.3.1 Epidemiology
Although HCV infection
can be transmitted by the same routes as HBV infection, the majority of
cases are related to intravenous drug abuse (60-70%). Ten percent of
patients with chronic HCV infection will have had a previous blood
transfusion. In the remaining patients, one cannot identify a possible
source of infection. Nonparenteral transmission through sexual or
intimate contact and maternal-infant exposure can occur with HCV
infection, but much less often than with HBV infection.
5.1.3.2 Natural
history
The natural history of
HCV infection has been better defined with the availability of anti-HCV
serologic testing. Widespread application of this test has revealed that
more than 75% of patients with acute HCV infection will remain
chronically infected. Of the patients with chronic hepatitis, 20% either
have or will go on to develop cirrhosis by 20 years. Thereafter, an
additional 1% per year develop cirrhosis. Of much concern is the fact
that recent data document a strong association between chronic HCV
infection and hepatocellular carcinoma. The exact relative risk has yet
to be determined but appears to be as high as or higher than that with
HBV. Other disorders that have been described in association with
chronic HCV infection include cryoglobulinemia, porphyria cutanea tarda
and membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis.
5.1.3.3 Treatment
Interferon-a
is the only therapy available for chronic HCV infection. Numerous
studies have identified a 40-50% response rate (normalization of ALT
abnormalities). However, at least 50% of these responders will relapse,
with the majority of relapses occurring within three months following
discontinuation of therapy. Therefore, only about 10-20% of treated
patients enjoy a sustained response (presumed cure). The most recent
clinical trials have utilized 12 to 24 months of therapy instead of the
standard 6 months. Sustained response rates in excess of 30% have been
published; however, longer therapy is associated with increased cost and
more side effects. There are no strict guidelines for who should receive
interferon treatment for chronic HCV infection. Factors that predict a
favorable response to interferon include recent infection, minimally
elevated ALT, absence of cirrhosis, low titer of virus in serum and
certain hepatitis C genotypes (genetic variants).
A vaccine for HCV has not been developed, but is an
active area of research. There are currently insufficient data to
advocate the use of immune serum globulin for the prevention of HCV
infection. Condoms should be used during the acute phase of the illness
and indefinitely for patients who are immunocompromised. Couples in whom
one is chronically infected with hepatitis C must make their own
decision in regard to condom use after being advised of the risks; the
risk of spread to regular sexual partners is 2-5%. Vertical transmission
from a normal mother to her newborn is rare; however, the risk of HCV
vertical transmission is much higher if the mother is co-infected by
HIV.
5.1.4 HEPATITIS D
VIRUS
Chronic hepatitis D
usually results from HDV superinfection of an HBV carrier. Less
commonly, acute HBV/HDV co-infection leads to chronic infection. Either
way, chronic hepatitis D is usually aggressive and severe with rapid
progression to cirrhosis.
The diagnosis is made by testing for anti-HDV in the
serum of HBV carriers with risk factors for HDV infection. HDV antigen
and HDV-RNA in serum or liver can also be measured, but only in a
limited number of laboratories. In North America this virus is most
often transmitted by intravenous drug abuse. In Mediterranean countries
nonparenteral transmission may also occur. Treatment with interferon for
HDV infection has been disappointing. Because of the dependency of HDV
on HBV, prevention of HBV infection with vaccine can decrease HDV
infection also.
| 5.2 Drug-Induced
Chronic Hepatitis |
page
500 |
Many drugs can cause
chronic hepatitis. Whether to discontinue an implicated drug depends to
some extent on whether the drug is merely causing persistent enzyme
abnormalities or hepatic dysfunction with severe histologic
abnormalities. In severe cases, fibrosis, cirrhosis and death from liver
failure or complications of portal hypertension can result. Examples of
drugs that are capable of causing chronic hepatitis that may progress to
liver failure and portal hypertension are oxyphenisatin, isoniazid,
nitrofurantoin, alpha methyldopa and dantrolene. On the other hand, if a
drug is essential to the health of the patient and there are no
unrelated agents that can be substituted, it is reasonable to continue
therapy under close clinical supervision providing the enzyme
abnormalities are mild and not associated with symptoms or functional
derangements (i.e., serum bilirubin, albumin and INR/PT remain normal).
Liver biopsy may be helpful in defining the severity of liver injury.
| 5.3 Autoimmune
Hepatitis |
page
500 |
Autoimmune hepatitis is
an immunologically mediated disorder of the liver that often affects
young females with a personal or family history of autoimmune disease.
The etiology is unknown. The onset may be insidious or acute. The
hepatic presentation can be that of sudden hepatic failure, chronic
hepatitis or inactive cirrhosis. The most common complaints include
fatigue, amenorrhea, complaints associated with an accompanying
rheumatological disorder such as arthritis, or those associated with
thyroid disease. Physical findings include jaundice (in severe cases),
spider nevi, palmar erythema and hepatosplenomegaly. Laboratory
investigations reveal hypergammaglo-bulinemia with pronounced
elevation of IgG levels, reduced serum albumin, positive antinuclear
factor and smooth-muscle antibody. A proposed subclassification
includes type 1 and type 2 autoimmune hepatitis, with the latter
demonstrating antibodies to liver/kidney microsome (anti-LKM 1
hepatitis). Liver biopsy is essential to establish the diagnosis and
severity of the underlying disease as well as to exclude other liver
disease. Cirrhosis is present in over 50% of autoimmune hepatitis on
initial biopsy.
Treatment is initiated with high-dose
corticosteroids (prednisone 40-60 mg/day) for 4-6 weeks. The dose is
then tapered to a maintenance level (e.g., 5-10 mg/day) just
sufficient to keep the liver enzymes within normal values. Often
azathioprine is used for its steroid-sparing effect. Following
discontinuation of treatment, most patients will relapse, requiring
reinitiation of therapy. Untreated autoimmune hepatitis progresses
rapidly to cirrhosis (three to five years). Although corticosteroids
may not prevent cirrhosis, they are clearly lifesaving in this
otherwise fatal condition. With careful titration of their medication,
most patients remain in stable condition for years. In the remaining
minority, liver transplantation is highly successful.
| 5.4 Alcoholic
Hepatitis |
page
501 |
This condition is
usually readily diagnosed on clinical grounds (see Section 6). These
features are contrasted with those of viral hepatitis in Table
8.
TABLE
8. Differentiating viral and alcoholic hepatitis
|
|
Viral
hepatitis |
Alcoholic
hepatitis |
|
| History |
Risk
factors |
Significant
alcoholic intake |
| Physical
examination |
Mild
hepatomegaly, extrahepatic stigmata not prominent |
Moderate
to marked hepatomegaly, florid stigmata |
| Laboratory
examination |
AST
variable
ALT > AST |
AST
<300
AST > ALT (often 2:1 or more) |
| Liver
biopsy |
Mononuclear
cells
Portal tract centered
Ground glass cells (HBV)
Special stains (HBV) |
Polymorphs
Pericentral, diffuse
Mallory's hyaline
Fat |
|
Nonalcoholic
hepatosteatonecrosis (fatty liver) is a common disorder, usually
asymptomatic, found most commonly in patients who are obese, diabetic
and, occasionally, hyperlipidemic. Mild right upper quadrant pain may
be present with aminotransferase levels typically <3-4 times
normal. The diagnosis can be established by ultrasound (or CT)
examination of the liver or by liver biopsy showing macrovesicular
fat. The treatment is that of the underlying condition, including
weight loss and therapy of diabetes and hyperlipidemia. Most cases of
fatty liver are not associated with inflammation and hepatocellular
necrosis. However, 10-20% have nonalcoholoic steatohepatitis and have
the potential to progress on to fibrosis and cirrhosis. |