Clinical, virological, and histologic evolution of hepatitis C virus infection in liver transplant recipients

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Abstract

We designed a prospective study to assess the time course and evolution of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in 152 patients who underwent a liver transplantation (LT) in our institution. Forty-four recipients (29%) were infected by HCV after transplantation: 40 who developed recurrent infection after LT and four who acquired infection during or after LT. No differences were found in survival actuarial rates at 1, 2, and 4 years after transplantation for patients infected by HCV vs. noninfected ones. Graft hepatitis occurred in 66% of HCV-infected recipients: 18 developed chronic active hepatitis (10 of them with intense fibrosis) and 2 developed cirrhosis during the follow-up. Infection by the HCV-1b genotype was found in 79% of the infected recipients and in 100% of those in whom histologic evolution was worst. Fourteen grafts were lost in 44 HCV-infected recipients, in comparison with 12 in 108 HCV-negative patients (P = .007), mostly because of chronic rejection. HCV infection did not affect life expectancy in the midterm follow-up for LT patients. However, it was often associated with the occurrence of early and severe graft hepatitis and with a higher incidence of graft loss due to chronic rejection.

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Lumbreras, C., Colina, F., Loinaz, C., Domingo, M. A. J., Fuertes, A., Dominguez, P., … Noriega, A. R. (1998). Clinical, virological, and histologic evolution of hepatitis C virus infection in liver transplant recipients. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 26(1), 48–55. https://doi.org/10.1086/516261

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