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Hepatology | 2006

Chronic hepatitis B in children after e antigen seroclearance: Final report of a 29‐year longitudinal study

Flavia Bortolotti; Maria Guido; S. Bartolacci; Paolo Cadrobbi; Carlo Crivellaro; Franco Noventa; Giulia Morsica; Maria Moriondo; Angelo Gatta

Chronic hepatitis B is usually a benign disease in Caucasian children; however, the long‐term prognosis remains unsettled. This report describes the results of a 29‐year longitudinal study including 99 white children with chronic hepatitis B, mainly acquired horizontally: 91 were hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) positive (4 had cirrhosis), and 8 were HBeAg negative at presentation. Of the 91 HBeAg‐positive children, 89 underwent HBeAg seroconversion after a mean period of 5.2 ± 4.0 years and were included in the study. Of the 85 children without cirrhosis, one had HBeAg‐negative hepatitis and the other 84 became inactive carriers. During a mean follow‐up of 14.5 ± 6.1 years after HBeAg seroclearance, 4 carriers experienced reactivation, and 3 of them had HBeAg‐negative hepatitis at the last follow‐up. Of the 8 initially HBeAg‐negative children, 2 had HBeAg‐negative hepatitis, and 6 were inactive carriers. Of the 4 children with cirrhosis, 2 had hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and remained alive and 2 lost the histological features of cirrhosis in adulthood. Two patients with HBeAg‐negative hepatitis and 1 with cirrhosis had experienced drug abuse. At the end of follow‐up, 15 of the 89 initially HBeAg‐positive patients and 2 of 8 initially HBeAg‐negative children had cleared hepatitis B surface antigen. In conclusion, the overall prognosis for chronic hepatitis B in horizontally infected Caucasian children is favorable; however, some patients progress to HCC and HBeAg‐negative hepatitis. Long‐term monitoring is important, as is counseling on cofactors of liver damage, such as alcohol and drug abuse. (HEPATOLOGY 2006;43:556–562.)


Gastroenterology | 2008

Long-Term Course of Chronic Hepatitis C in Children: From Viral Clearance to End-Stage Liver Disease

Flavia Bortolotti; Gabriella Verucchi; Calogero Cammà; Giuseppe Cabibbo; Lucia Zancan; Giuseppe Indolfi; Raffaella Giacchino; Matilde Marcellini; Maria Grazia Marazzi; Cristiana Barbera; Giuseppe Maggiore; Pietro Vajro; S. Bartolacci; Fiorella Balli; Anna Maccabruni; Maria Guido

BACKGROUND & AIMS The natural course of chronic hepatitis C (CHC) in children is not well understood. The aim of this study was to assess the long-term course of CHC in a large sample of otherwise healthy children. METHODS From 1990 to 2005, 504 consecutive antihepatitis C virus (HCV)-positive children were enrolled at 12 centers of a national observatory and were followed up retrospectively/prospectively. RESULTS Putative exposure was perinatal in 283 (56.2%) cases, parenteral in 158 (31.3%), and unknown in 63 (12.5%). At baseline, 477 (94.6%) cases were HCV RNA seropositive, 118 (24.7%) of which were treated with standard interferon alpha. Ten years after putative exposure, the outcome in 359 HCV RNA-positive, untreated patients was (1) undetectable viremia in 27 (7.5%) (by Cox regression analysis, spontaneous viral clearance was independently predicted by genotype 3 [hazard ratio 6.44; 95% confidence interval: 2.7-15.5]) and (2) persistent viremia in 332 (92%) cases. Six of these 332 cases (1.8%) progressed to decompensated cirrhosis (mean age, 9.6 years). This latter group included 5 Italian children perinatally infected with genotype 1a (4 of the mothers were drug users). Thirty-three (27.9%) treated patients achieved a sustained virologic response. CONCLUSIONS Over the course of a decade, few children with chronic HCV infection cleared viremia spontaneously, and those who did were more likely to have genotype 3. Persistent viral replication led to end-stage liver disease in a small subgroup characterized by perinatal exposure, maternal drug use, and infection with HCV genotype 1a. Children with such features should be considered for early treatment.


Gastroenterology | 1990

Long term outcome of chronic type B hepatitis in patients who acquire hepatitis B virus infection in childhood.

Flavia Bortolotti; Paolo Cadrobbi; C Crivellaro; Maria Guido; Massimo Rugge; Franco Noventa; Renata Calzia; Giuseppe Realdi

Seventy-six children aged 1-13 years who were known to be positive for hepatitis B surface antigen and hepatitis B e antigen in serum for at least 6 months and who had biopsy-proven chronic hepatitis have been followed longitudinally for 1-12 years (mean, 5 years). Twenty-three of them are now young adults. Eight patients had acute type B hepatitis 12-24 months before entering the study, while 68 patients came to observation during a chronic phase. At the beginning of follow-up, all 76 children were positive in serum for hepatitis B virus DNA, and 44 (58%) had chronic active hepatitis, associated with cirrhosis in two cases. During follow-up, 23 (30%) patients remained hepatitis B e antigen-positive, most with unchanged biochemical and histological features. The other 53 (70%) cases seroconverted to hepatitis B e antibody and cleared hepatitis B virus DNA from serum, including 7 of 8 (87%) patients with acute hepatitis at presentation. After seroconversion, alanine aminotransferase levels normalized in all patients and remained normal in 49 patients (92.5%) throughout a mean observation period of 3 years. Five of these children, including 2 of 7 (29%) with previous acute hepatitis, eventually cleared hepatitis B surface antigen from their sera. Finally, 4 (7.5%) patients experienced a mild increase of alanine aminotransferase levels several months after seroconversion in the absence of hepatitis B virus replication or of delta virus superinfection. Clinical and virological parameters did not significantly differ between patients with or without acute onset; however, seroconversion occurred earlier, and the rate of hepatitis B surface antigen clearance was greater in the former than in the latter group. The present data indicate that approximately two thirds of children with hepatitis B e antigen- and hepatitis B virus DNA-positive chronic hepatitis clear hepatitis B virus DNA from their sera before reaching adulthood. After termination of viral replication, most patients achieve a sustained biochemical remission, suggesting the disappearance of disease activity. Reactivation of virus replication after hepatitis B e antibody seroconversion has never been observed in this series, although mild alanine aminotransferase level abnormalities could be detected in a minority of cases.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2003

Chronic hepatitis C virus infection in childhood: clinical patterns and evolution in 224 white children.

Paloma Jara; Massimo Resti; Loreto Hierro; Raffaella Giacchino; Cristiana Barbera; Lucia Zancan; Carlo Crivellaro; Etienne Sokal; Chiara Azzari; Maria Guido; Flavia Bortolotti

The characteristics and evolution of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection were retrospectively investigated in a study of 224 HCV RNA-seropositive white children who were consecutively recruited at 7 European centers in 1980-1998. At presentation, all patients were positive for antibodies to hepatitis C virus, 87% were asymptomatic, and 48% had alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels that were < or =2 times the upper limit of the range considered to be normal. Of 200 children followed for 1-17.5 years (mean follow-up +/- standard deviation [SD], 6.2+/-4.7 years), only 12 (6%) achieved sustained viremia clearance and normalization of the ALT level. In 92 revised liver biopsy specimen analyses, the mean fibrosis score (+/-SD) was 1.5+/-1.3 for children <15 years of age and 2.3+/-1.2 for children > or =15 years of age (range, 0-6 years; P<.01). Pediatric HCV infection is usually mild, but few patients, especially those who are perinatally infected, clear viremia in the medium-term follow-up. Conversely, the higher rates of fibrosis observed in older patients suggest the possibility of an insidious progression of HCV-associated liver disease.


Gastroenterology | 1998

Chronic Hepatitis C in Children: The Pathological and Clinical Spectrum

Maria Guido; Massimo Rugge; Paloma Jara; Loreto Hierro; Raffaella Giacchino; Javier Larrauri; Lucia Zancan; Gioacchino Leandro; Carla E. Marino; Fiorella Balli; Alberto Bagni; Anna Timitilli; Flavia Bortolotti

BACKGROUND & AIMS Apart from the high-risk groups, the pathology of chronic hepatitis C in children is not well known. The aim of this study was to investigate the morphology of chronic hepatitis C in children without any underlying systemic disease and to evaluate its relationship to clinicovirological factors. METHODS Liver biopsy specimens from 80 children positive for antibody to hepatitis C virus were evaluated using a semiquantitative scoring system. RESULTS Chronic hepatitis was mild in most cases but had high-grade activity in 17 children (21.2%). A significant association was found between the grade of focal necrosis and alanine transaminase levels (P < 0.003). Fibrosis was absent in 22 cases (27.5%), mild in 44 (55%), and moderate in 13 (16.2%). Only 1 patient had cirrhosis. A significant relationship was detected between fibrosis scores and (1) duration of disease (P < 0.03); (2) portal inflammation (P < 0. 002); and (3) interface hepatitis (P < 0.003). CONCLUSIONS In otherwise healthy children, chronic hepatitis C is a morphologically mild disease in most cases. Fibrosis increases with the duration of disease, suggesting that end-stage disease may develop in young adulthood. Alanine transaminase levels correlate with intralobular focal necrosis but not with other lesions. In this respect, liver biopsy retains its importance in the management of chronic hepatitis C in children.


Journal of Hepatology | 1998

Outcome of chronic hepatitis B in Caucasian children during a 20-year observation period

Flavia Bortolotti; Paloma Jara; Carlo Crivellaro; Loreto Hierro; Paolo Cadrobbi; E. Frauca; Carmen Camarena; Angela de la Vega; Carmen Diaz; Lorena De Moliner; Franco Noventa

BACKGROUND/AIMS Chronic hepatitis B virus infection can lead to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma, particularly in men over 40 years of age and in areas where childhood-onset infection is common. The sequence of events from paediatric infection to severe disease in adults is only partially known. The aim of this study was to evaluate the evolution of chronic hepatitis B acquired in childhood during 20 years of follow-up. PATIENTS One hundred and eighty-five consecutive, otherwise healthy, Caucasian children were enrolled in Padua (Italy) and in Madrid (Spain) between 1975 and 1985, and followed for an average period of 13 years; 168 were hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) positive and five had cirrhosis. RESULTS Thirty patients received steroids or levamisole and 21 interferon, but treatment did not significantly influence HBeAg clearance. Overall, two (1.1%) children, with initial cirrhosis, developed hepatocellular carcinoma and the other three (1.6%) cirrhotic patients became asymptomatic carriers of infection after anti-HBe seroconversion and biochemical remission; 14 (7.5%) children maintained HBeAg positive hepatitis; 155 (83.8%) became asymptomatic carriers of infection after anti-HBe seroconversion and biochemical remission; six (3.2%) experienced reactivation of liver disease and viral replication after remission and five (2.7%) maintained biochemical features of liver damage after HBeAg clearance. Only 6% cleared hepatitis B surface antigen. CONCLUSIONS Even considering the bias of treatment, the large majority of Caucasian children with chronic hepatitis B became asymptomatic carriers of infection with normal alanine amino-transferase during the first 20 years of observation. Cirrhosis is an early, rare complication, and a risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma. A subgroup of patients who experienced reactivation or maintained liver damage after HBeAg clearance seems to be at greater risk for disease progression during adult life.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2002

Maternal Drug Use Is a Preeminent Risk Factor for Mother-to-Child Hepatitis C Virus Transmission: Results from a Multicenter Study of 1372 Mother-Infant Pairs

Massimo Resti; Chiara Azzari; Luisa Galli; Giovanna Zuin; Raffaella Giacchino; Flavia Bortolotti; Matilde Marcellini; Maria Moriondo; Maurizio de Martino; A. Vierucci

This prospective multicenter study evaluated separately the significance of maternal injection drug use (IDU) and human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) coinfection in vertical transmission of hepatitis C virus (HCV). In all, 1372 consecutive, unselected HCV antibody-positive mothers and their infants were studied. Maternal HIV-1 coinfection (crude odds ratios [OR], 1.41; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.16-1.66; P =.007) and IDU (OR, 1.58; 95% CI, 1.37-1.78; P <.00001) were linked to mother-to-child HCV transmission in unadjusted analysis when all anti-HCV-positive mothers were evaluated. When only HCV RNA-positive mothers were evaluated, maternal IDU, but not maternal HIV-1 coinfection, was significantly associated with mother-to-child HCV transmission. Multivariable analysis confirmed the link between maternal IDU and HCV transmission (adjusted OR [AOR], 1.51; 95% CI, 1.19-1.92; P =.0006), but no association was found with HIV-1 coinfection (AOR, 0.98; 95% CI, 0.73-1.33; P =.93). IDU, but not HIV-1 coinfection, seems to be a preeminent risk factor for vertical HCV transmission.


Journal of Hepatology | 2010

High sustained virologic response rates in children with chronic hepatitis C receiving peginterferon alfa-2b plus ribavirin

Stefan Wirth; Carmen Ribes-Koninckx; Maria Angeles Calzado; Flavia Bortolotti; Lucia Zancan; Paloma Jara; M Shelton; Nanda Kerkar; Marcela Galoppo; Alejandra Pedreira; Norberto Rodriguez-Baez; Mirta Ciocca; Alain Lachaux; Florence Lacaille; Thomas Lang; Ulrike Kullmer; Wolf Deitrich Huber; Teresita Gonzalez; Henry Pollack; Estella M. Alonso; Pierre Broué; Jyoti Ramakrishna; Deborah A. Neigut; Antonio Del Valle-Segarra; Bessie Hunter; Zachery Goodman; Christine Xu; Hanzhe Zheng; Stephanie Noviello; Vilma Sniukiene

BACKGROUND & AIMS Pegylated interferon (PEG-IFN) alfa-2b plus ribavirin (RBV) is the standard of care for adults with chronic hepatitis C but was not approved for the treatment of children at the time of this study. The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of PEG-IFN alfa-2b plus RBV in children. METHODS Children and adolescents ages 3-17 years were treated with PEG-IFN alfa-2b (60microg/m(2)/week) plus RBV (15mg/kg/day). The duration of therapy was 24 weeks for genotype (G) 2 and G3 patients with low viral load (<600,000IU/ml) and 48 weeks for G1, G4, and G3 with high viral load (>or=600,000IU/ml). The primary end point was sustained virologic response (SVR), defined as undetectable hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA 24 weeks after completion of therapy. RESULTS SVR was attained by 70 (65%) children. Genotype was the main predictor of response: G1, 53%; G2/3, 93%; G4, 80%. SVRs were similar in younger and older children. Baseline viral load was the main predictor of response in the G1 cohort. No new safety signals were identified, and adverse events (AEs) were generally mild or moderate in severity. Dose was modified because of AEs in 25% of children; 1 child discontinued because of an AE (thrombocytopenia). No serious AEs related to study drugs were reported. CONCLUSION Therapy with PEG-IFN alfa-2b plus RBV in children and adolescents with chronic hepatitis C offers favorable efficacy, reduced injection frequency, and an acceptable safety profile.


Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition | 1994

Posttransfusion and community-acquired hepatitis C in childhood

Flavia Bortolotti; Paloma Jara; Carmen Diaz; Pietro Vajro; Loreto Hierro; Raffaella Giacchino; Angela de la Vega; Carlo Crivellaro; C. Camarena; Cristiana Barbera; Gabriella Nebbia; Lucia Zancan; Lorena De Moliner

Following a longitudinal study of chronic non-A, non-B hepatitis in Italy and Spain, we evaluated the epidemiologic and clinical features of chronic hepatitis C in 77 consecutively observed children (35 male; mean age, 4 years) without underlying systemic diseases. All subjects were positive for antibody to hepatitis C virus in serum by second-generation tests. Forty-six patients had received blood transfusions in the perinatal period; 12 had a mother with antibodies to HCV in serum (five of these mothers were drug users or partners of a drug user); seven had a history of putative percutaneous exposure; and 12 had not been exposed to any risk factors for viral hepatitis. At presentation, only 22% were symptomatic, mean alanine-aminotransferase levels were three times the upper normal value, and liver histology showed active disease in only nine of 28 cases (32%). During a mean observation period of 6 years, only 11 of 57 patients (19%) complained of symptoms and 11 of 40 cases (27%) had histologic features of active hepatitis. Two patients had severe hepatitis with associated cirrhosis. However, only six of 57 cases (10%) achieved sustained biochemical remission. The clinical features and the outcome were similar in both the posttransfusion and the community-acquired cases. These results indicate that transfusions in the perinatal period are the single most important cause of hepatitis C in otherwise healthy children. Community-acquired cases represent an heterogeneous epidemiologic group in which maternal transmission, whether perinatal or postnatal, could be relevant. Histologically severe hepatitis and cirrhosis seem to be an infrequent feature of chronic hepatitis C virus infection in childhood and adolescence, in spite of persistent liver damage.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2003

Fibrosis in chronic hepatitis C acquired in infancy: is it only a matter of time?

Maria Guido; Flavia Bortolotti; Gioacchino Leandro; Paloma Jara; Loreto Hierro; Javier Larrauri; Cristiana Barbera; Raffaella Giacchino; Lucia Zancan; Fiorella Balli; Carlo Crivellaro; Emilio Cristina; Angela Pucci; Massimo Rugge

Abstract Objective The natural history of chronic hepatitis C acquired in infancy is not well understood. The progression of fibrosis was analyzed in untreated children with chronic hepatitis C virus infection and no other hepatotoxic cofactors. Methods A total of 112 pediatric patients (13 with paired liver biopsies) were considered. Fibrosis was assessed by METAVIR score (i.e., stage F1 to F4). The ratio between the stage of fibrosis (METAVIR units) and the presumed duration of infection represented the “estimated” rate of fibrosis progression per year. In patients with paired biopsies, the “observed” rate of fibrosis progression was defined as the difference between the stage of fibrosis in the two biopsies divided by the time interval between them. Results Both age of patients at biopsy and duration of infection correlated with stage of fibrosis (p Conclusions Chronic hepatitis C acquired in childhood is a progressive, slow-moving, fibrotic disease. Fibrosis progression inferred on the basis of linear mathematical models should be critically evaluated in the clinical practice.

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