HEP C Flashcards
what is Hep C?
Blood borne, single stranded, enveloped RNA
virus
how is Hep C transmitted?
IVDU
– How many are chronically infected with HCV?
* Vertical transmission
* Sexual exposure
* Transfusion
* Occupational exposure – needle stick injury
* Tattooing, acupuncture, piercing and dental
work
what is the incubation period of Hep C?
– 6-8 weeks
* Acute infection
– Serology can take up to 6 months to become +ve
do genotype and viral load affect disease progression?
not usually
what influences disease progression?
- Risk Factors
- Alcohol
- Older age at infection
- Infection duration
- Male sex
- Obesity
- Diabetes/insulin resistance
- HIV and/or HBV co infection
who do you screen in?
- Unexplained LFTs
- Injected drugs
- Blood transfusion pre-1991
- Children of infected mothers
- Sexual partners of infected people
- Exposure to blood with risk of transmission
- Received tattoos, piercings, or acupuncture
with poor infection control procedures
what are the signs and symptoms of hep C?
- Usually asymptomatic
- Jaundice
- Malaise
- Dark urine
- RUQ pain
- Loss of Appetite, Dec. Weight
- Nausea
- Cirrhosis (Swollen liver, muscle weakness,
swollen ankles, bloated, itchy skin)
how do you diagnose hep C?
- Differential: CHB, ALD, Haemochromatosis
- Risk Factors
- Symptoms
- Blood Tests
- Hepatitis C antibodies
- Serology for Hep C viral RNA
- Liver Biopsy
- Viral Genotyping
what are the aims of treatment?
- Primary Aim to achieve viral eradication, or
sustained viral response (SVR) - Secondary Aims – Prevent transmission, slow
progression of liver disease and Inc. QoL - Response rate: Lower in patients with cirrhosis or fibrosis
- Dependent on treatment history & patient
parameters
what should you do before starting treatment?
- HCV genotype and subtype
- HCV RNA (viral load)
- Treatment naïve or experienced
- Liver disease – Cirrhosis, Staging of hepatic
fibrosis - Bloods – FBC, INR, LFTs, Renal function.
what are the common side effects/
- Peginterferon
– Anaemia, flu like symptoms
– Thrombocytopenia, depression or mood changes
– ~30% developed major depression (plus increasedrecurrence) - Ribavirin
– Haemolytic anaemia, nausea, rash, cough, gout
what monitoring needs to be done with the side effects?
– FBC weekly for a month, then monthly.
– Thyroid function – Prior to therapy and then every 3 months
what are Daas and what are the different types?
Direct Acting Antivirals
* Types
– NS3/4A Protease Inhibitors (PIs)
– Nucleoside and Nucleotide NS5B Polymerase
Inhibitors
– NS5A Inhibitors
– Non-Nucleoside NS5B Polymerase Inhibitors
how do the different types of DAAs work?
- NS3/4A Protease Inhibitors (PIs)
– Block viral enzyme (protease) - Nucleoside and Nucleotide NS5B Polymerase
Inhibitors
– Directly block HCV RNA preventing replication - NS5A Inhibitor
– NS5A HCV protein needed for replication - Non-nucleoside NS5B Polymerase Inhibitors
– Insert directly into HCV blocking other parts of HCV
from binding and replicating
what does treatment depend on?
– Genotype
– Naïve or Previous treatment
– Cirrhotic or not.
– Cirrhosis compensated or decompensated
– HCV in pregnancy
– Renal Impairment plus Tx patients
– Coinfection HIV/HCV
– HCV recurrence post liver transplant