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From the Division of Hemato/Oncology, the Department of Pediatrics, Università di Padova; the Servizio di Microbiologia, Azienda Ospedale di Padova; the Istituto di Microbiologia, Università di Udine; the Cattedra di Istochimica e Immunoistochimica Patologica, Università di Padova-ULSS 15, Ospedale di Cittadella, Italy.
Sera of 658 patients who had completed treatment for pediatric malignancy were analyzed by a second-generation enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and recombinant immunoblot assay test to assess the prevalence of hepatitis C virus (HCV)-seropositivity. All HCV-seropositive patients underwent detailed clinical, laboratory, virologic, and histologic study to analyze the course of HCV infection. One hundred seventeen of the 658 patients (17.8%) were positive for HCV infection markers. Among the 117 anti-HCV+ patients, 41 (35%) were also positive for markers of hepatitis B virus infection with or without delta virus infection markers, 91 (77.8%) had previously received blood product transfusions, and 25 (21.4%) showed a normal alanine aminotransferase (ALT) level during the last 5-year follow-up (11 of them never had abnormal ALT levels). The remaining 92 patients showed ALT levels higher than the upper limit of normal range. Eighty-one of 117 (70%) anti-HCV+ patients were HCV-RNA+, with genotype 1b being present in most patients (54%). In univariate analysis, no risk factor for chronic liver disease was statistically significant. In this study, the prevalence of HCV infection was high in patients who were treated for a childhood malignancy. In about 20% of anti-HCV+ patients, routes other than blood transfusions are to be considered in the epidemiology of HCV infection. After a 14-year median follow-up, chronic liver disease of anti-HCV+ positive patients did not show progression to liver failure.
PATIENTS TREATED for a pediatric malignancy are at high risk for parenterally transmitted viral hepatitis.1,2 Blood product transfusions are the major risk factors.3,4 Moreover, when compared with immunocompetent patients, the immunodepression caused by chemotherapy increases the chronicity rate of viral hepatitis.2 During the last two decades, screening blood donors for the hepatitis B virus (HBV) has resulted in a remarkable reduction of posttransfusion B-virus hepatitis5-7; thus, non-A, non-B hepatitis has become the major form of parenterally transmitted hepatitis. The successful cloning of hepatitis C virus (HCV) genome8 and the development of serologic markers of HCV infection9 showed that HCV was responsible for 85% to 90% of parenterally transmitted non-A, non-B hepatitis. The prognosis of chronic HCV is a matter of controversy. HCV could worsen the outcome of successfully treated pediatric oncology patients because a progression rate to cirrhosis of 20% has been documented in 20-year follow-up studies in HCV-infected adults with no other disease.10,11 Furthermore, recent studies have shown that HCV infection is a risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma.12 On the other hand, Seef et al,13 after an average follow-up of 18 years, reported a low incidence of deaths related to chronic HCV infection acquired from blood transfusion.
Our clinics follow a large number of patients who were treated for malignancy when they were children and when there were no tests available for detecting HCV in blood products. Such tests became available in 1990, allowing us to determine the prevalence, virologic pattern, and clinical course of chronic HCV hepatitis in a cohort of children and young adults who had been treated for malignancy before 1990.
Patient Selection
Detection of HBV and HCV Infection
Definition of Chronic Liver Disease in Anti-HCV+ Patients We used a standard definition for chronic liver disease (CLD): ie, the elevation of serum ALT (normal range, 5 to 55 IU/L) for more than 6 months19 after the completion of chemotherapy for childhood malignancy. Patients classified as anti-HCV+ were consequently evaluated for other potential causes of CLD using the analysis of serum -1-antitrypsin, ferritin, copper, ceruloplasmin, and autoimmune hepatitis markers (ie, serum anti-nuclear, -smooth muscle, -mitochondrial, and -liver/kidney microsome auto-antibodies). Other causes of liver disease (ie, alcoholism, hepatotoxic drugs) were excluded by medical history. In addition, all anti-HCV+ patients underwent screening for hepatocellular carcinoma (serum -fetoprotein determination and hepatic ultrasound examination) and were monitored for ALT, serum bilirubin, -glutamil-transferase (GGT), and prothrombin time at least once every 6 months.
Liver Histology Liver biopsy was performed only in patients with CLD. After the patient's or parental consent, all biopsies were performed using a Menghini needle. All specimens, at least 1.5 cm long, had been fixed in 5% buffered formalin and embedded in paraffin. Five-micrometer sections had been routinely stained with hematoxylin-eosin, periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) before and after diastase digestion, Van Gieson method for collagen, Gomori method for reticulin, and Perl's method for iron. All liver biopsy specimens were reviewed by one of us (M.G.), blind of any clinical information. Portal, periportal, and intralobular necro-inflammatory lesions were semiquantitatively scored and an overall histological activity index (HAI) was attributed. The final diagnosis of chronic hepatitis (CH) was based on both grade and stage of liver disease. The grade of CH was defined as mild (grade 1), moderate (grade 2), or severe (grade 3) based on the severity of portal/periportal and lobular activity. Fibrosis was assessed as absent, portal (stage 1), septal (stage 2), septal with architectural distortion (stage 3), or septal with cirrhosis (stage 4).19Statistical Analysis Data collected by the dBase-4 program (Ashton-Tate Corp, USA) were analyzed using the SAS for Windows package (SAS Institute Inc, Cary, NC) to determine risk factors related to the development of CLD. We compared the frequency for the following putative risk factors in patients with and without CLD: sex, age at diagnosis, diagnosis of malignancy, number of blood transfusions, concomitant positivity for HBV markers with or without HDV infection, and follow-up duration. Risk factors significantly different at P < .1 were entered into a stepwise logistical regression model. The chi-squared test was used for the analysis of contingence tables and the Wilcoxon nonparametric score test was used to determine a different distribution for a quantitative variable. The results are those as of August 31, 1995.
Prevalence of Anti-HCV+ Tests in the Study Cohort One hundred seventeen of 658 (17.8%) patients were determined to be anti-HCV+ by ELISA, and confirmed by the RIBA II test. There were 70 males and 47 females; their ages at diagnosis of malignancy ranged from 4 months to 19.7 years (mean, 5.7 years; median, 4.9 years), and the follow-up period ranged from 5.1 to 24.8 years (mean, 14.3 years; median, 14 years). The diagnosis of malignancy was leukemia or lymphoma in 74 of 117 (63%) patients and solid tumor in 43 of 117 (37%) patients. The prevalence of HCV positivity was 17.2% (74 of 431) among leukemia/lymphoma patients, and 18.9% (43 of 227) among patients with solid tumor.Analysis of 117 Anti-HCV+ Patients CLD. Eleven anti-HCV+ (9.4%) patients always had normal ALT levels during the entire follow-up period, whereas 14 (12%) had normalized ALT levels in a median time of 4.6 years (mean, 4.6 years; range, 1.2 to 9.4 years). CLD was found in 92 of 117 (78.6%) patients; 3 of these patients (2 with concomitant HBsAg positivity) had prothrombin time below the normal range (70% to 110%, 12 to 14 seconds) and 5 (all of them anti-HCV+ only) had elevated GGT and bilirubin levels. Albumin level was normal in all 117 anti-HCV+ patients. Thirty-two of 117 patients (27%) showed IgG levels higher than the upper limit of normal range (3 of 25 [12%] in the group without CLD and 29 of 92 [31.5%] in the group of anti-HCV+ patients with persistent CLD).
Risk Factor Analysis
The major findings of this study are the high prevalence of HCV infection in patients treated for a childhood malignancy (in particular, in leukemia/lymphoma patients) during the pre-HCV marker era, and a relatively benign clinical course with neither liver failure nor HCC after a 14-year median follow-up.
Submitted October 21, 1996;
accepted April 8, 1997.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page
charge payment. This article must therefore be hearly marked
``advertisment'' in accordance with 18 U.S.C. section 1734 solely to
indicate this fact. We are indebted to G.B. McDonald (Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA) for his helpful comments and editorial suggestions, and to Halbert Citar for technical assistance.
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