Autoantibody prevalence in children with liver disease due to chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection

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Abstract

HCV infection and interferon-alpha (IFN-α) therapy have been associated with autoimmunity. To assess whether chronic liver disease (CLD) due to HCV infection or its treatment with IFN-α cause autoimmune manifestations, the prevalence of tissue autoantibodies in 51 children with chronic HCV infection and 84 with other CLD was analysed by standard techniques. Sixty-five percent of patients with chronic HCV infection, 66% with chronic hepatitis B infection and 60% with Wilson's disease were positive for at least one autoantibody. In the 51 subjects with chronic HCV infection (29 treated with IFN-α, 22 untreated), tested on 165 occasions over a median of 9 months (range 5-42 months), autoantibodies to nuclei (ANA), smooth muscle (SMA), gastric parietal cell (GPC) and/or liver kidney microsomal type 1 (LKM-1) were similarly prevalent in treated and untreated patients (90% versus 68%, P = 0-12). Positivity for SMA was present in 67%, GPC in 32%, ANA in 10%, LKM- 1 in 8% of cases. Treatment with IFN-α had to be suspended due to transaminase elevation in one SMA-positive, one ANA-positive but in three of four LKM- 1-positive patients. Our results show that: (i) autoantibodies are common in vital-induced hepatitis and Wilson's disease; (ii) positivity for SMA, GPC, ANA is part of the natural course of chronic HCV infection, their prevalence being unaffected by IFN-α; and (iii) IFN-α should be used cautiously in the treatment of LKM- l/HCV-positive patients.

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Gregorio, G. V., Pensati, P., Iorio, R., Vegnente, A., Mieli-Vergani, G., & Vergani, D. (1998). Autoantibody prevalence in children with liver disease due to chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. Clinical and Experimental Immunology, 112(3), 471–476. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2249.1998.00574.x

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