Viral Hepatitis Flashcards

1
Q

What is hepatitis?

A

Refers to the inflammation of the liver

Can be from infectious causes:

  • Hepatitis A-E viruses
  • CMV, RBV, adenovirus

Also non-infectious:

  • Medications
  • Toxins
  • Auto-immune disorders
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2
Q

What are the features of different hepatitis viruses? (type, chronicity, spread, vaccine)

A

HAV:

  • Small, unenveloped, symmetrical RNA virus
  • Acute only
  • Faeco-oral route; uncooked shellfish = common cause
  • Vaccine available

HEV:

  • Small, unenveloped, RNA virus; Pig reservoir
  • Acute mainly, chronic possible (e.g. if immunosuppressed)
  • Faeco-oral route; water/food borne
  • No vaccine in UK

HBV:

  • Enveloped, double stranded DNA virus; replicating by reverse transcription
  • Acute and chronic
  • Blood/body fluids incl. unprotected sex, needle sharing and vertical transmission
  • Vaccine available

HCV:

  • Enveloped, single stranded RNA virus; Chimpanzee hosts
  • Acute (25%) and chronic (75%)
  • Blood/body fluids incl. unprotected sex, needle sharing and vertical transmission (but mostly needles)
  • No vaccine

HDV:

  • Enveloped particle, only able to propagate in the presence of HBV as a (co-infection or superinfection)
  • Acute and chronic
  • Blood/body fluids incl. unprotected sex, needle sharing and vertical transmission
  • No vaccine
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3
Q

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A

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4
Q

What is the epidemiology of viral hepatitis?

A

HAV:
- Decreasing prevalence worldwide, most common in developing countries e.g. India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal; parts of Africa, South and Central America and the Middle East

HBV:

  • Most common cause worldwide; c.1/350 in UK
  • Vaccination has caused big declines

HCV:

  • c.214,000/UK
  • Numbers keep increasing

HDV:
- Numbers dropping as HBV numbers are too

HEV:
- Common worldwide with frequent outbreaks

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5
Q

How does HAV present?

A

Incubation period:
- 2-6wks

Prodrome:

  • Mild flu-like symptoms (anorexia, nausea, fatigue, fatigue, malaise, joint pain)
  • Smokers lose taste for tobacco
  • Diarrhoea

Icteric (=jaundiced) phase:

  • Dark urine (appears first)
  • Pale stools (not always)
  • Jaundice (70-85%)
  • Abdo pain (40%)
  • Prutiris
  • Arthralgia + skin rash (less common, vasculitic appearance)
  • Tender hepatomegaly, splenomegaly and lymphadenopathy

Younger children are more likely to have mild symptoms/be asymptomatic

Pregnant women are more likely to experience complications e.g. hepatic failure

Recovery can take up to 6/12

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6
Q

How does HBV present?

A

Incubation:
- 40-160 days

Acute:

  • May be subclinical or with a mild flu-like illness (see hep A)
  • Jaundice in 30-50%
  • Decompensated liver disease is possible

Chronic:

  • Many are healthy carriers
  • Some have symptoms of fatigue, anorexia, nausea and RUQ pain
  • Hepatocellular carcinoma and cirrhosis are common complications
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7
Q

How does HCV present?

A

Incubation:
- 6-7 weeks

Acute:

  • Mostly asymptomatic
  • Jaundice +/- deranged LFTs +/- anorexia, lethargy, abdo pain in 20-30%

Chronic:

  • Persistently raised/fluctuating LFTs
  • Often goes unrecognised for 10-20yrs and becomes an incidental finding
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8
Q

How does HDV present?

A

Co-infection (at same time) and superinfection (caught after) with HBV and HVD puts individuals at a greater likelihood of experiencing:

  • Liver failure during acute infection
  • Rapid progression to cirrhosis
  • Increased risk of liver cancer
  • Overall greater fatality rates
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9
Q

What initial blood tests might you do if you suspect viral hepatitis?

A

LFTs:

  • ALT>AST = a general feature of hepatitis; will be at varying levels in each viral hepatitis at different points (e.g. chronically elevated enzymes in chronic HCV) but will help guide you towards using more specific blood tests
  • Alk phos may be normal
  • Bilirubin also rise (hence jaundice)
  • Albumin may also be deranged as liver synthetic function is off

Clotting:
- INR, PT- severe prolongation might indicate (impending) acute liver failure

FBC, U+E, ferritin, lipids; serology for HIV or other viral causes of hepatitis

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10
Q

What are the specific tests required to diagnose viral hepatitis?

A

Viral serological testing
- Looks at the presence of a range of different antigens and antibodies/Ig depending on what cause is suspected and where in the timeline we are

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11
Q

What do serological tests show in HAV?

A

IgM HAV

  • Presence indicates previous hep A or vaccine
  • Indicates lasting immunity
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12
Q

What do serological tests show in HBV?

A

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HBsAg:

  • HBV surface antigen - found on outer wall of envelope
  • Presence indicates current infection
  • Is the earliest detectable sign of the infection in your body (3-5wks post infection)
  • If present for >6/12 = carrier status/chronic disease
  • The vaccine involves injecting patients with HBsAG, so will be present just after vaccination
  • Absence indicates you have never had HBV or you have had it and cleared it (including if you’ve been vaccinated)

HBeAg:

  • HBV envelope-antigen - found between the surface and the core of HBV
  • Presence indicates current infection AND that the virus is replicating (as is released only during replication) i.e. you are highly contagious, proportional to titre of HBeAG
  • Usually present for 1.5-3/12 after acute illness

HBcAg:
- HBV core-antigen - found inside the core area
- Not free circulating itself as is encapsulated so not a good measure for viral presence
_____
HBsAb:
- HBV surface antibody
- Responsible for triggering initial immune response to HBV
- +ve in resolved infection AND in vaccination (as would have been produced in response to injected HBsAg) - therefore you need other viral markers to tell whether there is/has been an infection (as opposed to vaccination)
- Negative in chronic HBV infection

HBeAb:

  • HBe ‘e’/envelope antibody
  • Presence indicates your body is producing an immune response to HBV
  • Also present in people recovering from acute hep B - here will have low/absent HBeAg
  • If present in chronic hep B, indicates that only low levels of the virus are likely to be present in the blood

HBcAb:

  • HB core antibody
  • Used to help distinguish acute, chronic, past infections
  • Acute infection = High IgM HBcAb (+ +ve HBsAg)
  • Chronic infection = Low IgM HBcAb + high IgG HBcAb (+ +ve HBsAg)
  • Past infection = Low IgM HBcAb + High IgG HBcAb (+ no HBsAg)

HBV DNA:

  • Looks at the viral load - the viral copies in the blood stream
  • Greater the viral load, the more active the infection

Order:

  • Screen with - HBcAb (previous infection or vaccination?) + HBsAg (active infection?)
  • If positive - HBeAg (how infective/much replication?) + HBV DNA (viral load)

Should also test for HCV and HDV serology to rule in/out co-infection

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13
Q

What do serological tests show in HCV?

A

HCV-RNA:

  • Used to detect HCV in the blood
  • Presence indicates active infection

Anti-HCV:

  • Detects the presence of HCV antibodies
  • Presence indicates that you have been exposed to HCV

HCV-viral load:
- Measures the number of viral RNA particles in the blood

Viral genotyping:

  • There are 6x genotypes for HCV
  • Most common in the UK is type 1
  • Treatments differ between genotypes (and viral load, presence of cirrhosis, and prior treatment exposure etc)
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14
Q

What general advice should be given in hepatitis? (by subtype)

A

A+E:

  • Advice about food + toilet hygiene
  • Reassurance about the chronicity of the illness
  • Avoid unprotected sexual intercourse (HAV can also be sexually transmitted e.g. rimming)

B+C:
- Avoid unprotected sexual intercourse of all types until they have become non-infectious or until their partners have received any available vaccines
- Explanation of their condition, emphasising long term implications for health + their partner; routes of transmission and abstaining from blood donation
Obtain info necessary for contact tracing
- Advice about vertical transmission
- Advice about needle use

Abstaining from alcohol and smoking until liver enzymes are normal

Advice about risks in pregnancy

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15
Q

What initial management might be indicated in viral hepatitis?

A

ABCDE:
- Are there any signs of decompensated liver disease that require hospitalisation?

Referral:
- Anyone with newly found biomarkers of acute infection needs a specialist/hepatologist/ID

Supportive: (this is generally indicated for uncomplicated HAV)

  • Fluids
  • Antiemetics
  • Reassurance + advice
  • Rest

Itching:

  • Stay cool
  • Wear loose clothing
  • Avoid hot showers/baths

Vaccination:

  • With hepatitis any available vaccine they are not infected with i.e. Hep A and B for someone with hep C - as co-infection increases risks of hepatic failure
  • Same for close contacts of the affected

Stop any non-essential hepatotoxic medications

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16
Q

What specific treatments are indicated in HBV?

A

Acute HBV:
- Anti-virals are only generally indicated in cases of fulminant hepatitis

Chronic HBV:

  • 1st line with HBeAg +ve or -ve chronic Dx = SC Pegylated interferon alfa-2a
  • 48-week course
  • 2nd line = tenofovir disoproxil OR entecavir
17
Q

How do you manage HBV in pregnancy and who are breast feeding?

A

Offer tenofovir disoproxil to women with HBV DNA titre >107IU/ml in the 3rd trimester to reduce risk of transmission to the baby

18
Q

What specific treatments are indicated in HCV?

A

Combination dual drug therapy:

Pegylated interferon alfa-2a
- SC, weekly

AND

Ribavirin
- PO, daily

+/-

Treatment with a protease inhibitor:
- For those with genotype 1, as part of a triple therapy shown to be more successful

19
Q

How do the specific therapies for HBV and HCV work? What are some important side effects and other considerations?

A

Pegylated interferon:

  • Interferon (a cytokine used to trigger host viral immune defences) with added polyethylene glycol (PEG) which makes the interferon last longer in the body
  • Long list of side effects e.g. flu-like symptoms, increase infections
  • Women of childbearing age must be on effective birth control

Tenofovir:

  • Anti-retroviral -nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibito
  • SEs: GI disturbance, anaemia
  • Given as granules that shouldn’t be chewed or mixed with liquids (instead eat with soft food e.g. yoghurt)

Rivabirin:

  • Anti-viral, stops viral RNA synthesis etc.
  • Similar side effects as above
  • Teratogen - effective contraception for males (excreted in semen) and females including after stopping for up to 7/12
20
Q

What else is required with managing hepatitis?

A

Notify Health Protection Unit
- To facilitate appropriate surveillance, contact trace etc.

HIV:

  • C.10% of those with HBV are also infected in HIV
  • Complications are worse for co-infection but both can be treated with a simpler combination of drugs so screening attempt should be made
21
Q

What monitoring is required in chronic HBV?

A

Those that are not eligible for anti-viral therapy must have semi-regular (12-48 wks depending on levels) ALT +/- HBV DNA levels

Hepatocellular carcinoma:

  • Hepatic USS + alfa-fetoprotein testing every 6/12 in people with significant fibrosis or cirrhosis
  • Consider if >40yrs + FHx HCC and HBV DNA >20,000IU/ml