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UPDATE
ON PREVENTION AND TREATMENT OF VIRAL HEPATITIS IN CHILDREN |
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ABSTRACT The risk is related to presence and amount of maternal HCV RNA at the time of birth. Infection rate is higher in children form HIV positive mothers, and higher if they are themselves co-infected with HIV. Breast milk feeding is not a risk factor, and there is so far no argument to propose cesarean delivery to HCV positive mothers. Treatment with interferon alone is poorly efficient, although pediatric studies remain scarce. Combination treatment using Ribavirin plus interferon yield a higher success in eradicating viral infection in adults. |
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Beside
person to person direct transmission, this resistant virus persists for
long periods in the environment. Hence,
vaccination of patients with chronic liver disease is advocated, and trials
have shown a 73% response rate after a single dose of hepatitis A vaccine
in hepatitis C patients, and 83% in other chronic liver disease patients
3. For such
secondary prophylaxis, vaccination of 18 household contacts was required
to prevent one case of secondary hepatitis A 6**.
In high
endemicity area, universal vaccination has been shown able to decrease
the carriage rate in the population, including amongst non vaccinated
children true reduction of horizontal transmission8,9. In addition, this
is the first vaccine able to decrease the incidence of childhood cancer
8,9. Furthermore,
the increased incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma in the United States
is thought to be due to the increasing number of HBV and HCV patients,
with patients infected in the 1960s &1970s reaching now two to three decades
of evolution 13,14**. Amongst 610 chronic hepatitis B adult patients,
the cumulative progression rate to cirrhosis reached 21% after 10years
and 37% after 15 years, while the amount of alcohol intake was shown to
be an independent factor of progression to cirrhosis 15*. Among
patients infected at birth , the lifetime risk of hepatocarcinoma reaches
50% for men and 20% for women 14**. Natural evolution studies are scarce,
and contaminated by treatment received. Over 185 mediterranean children
followed for an average of 13 years, some of them treated, 84% cleared
HBe ag on follow up but only 6 % lost HBs ag. Hepatitis relapse was observed
after HBe ag loss in 9 patients, some of them being infected with HBe
minus precore mutants. A minority
of these children were born from HBs ag positive mothers, and similar
studies in children contaminated at birth are lacking. Precore stop codom
mutant viruses coexists with the wild type virus in 10 to 25% of chronic
hepatitis B children, and this percentage rises to 39% after HBe seroconversion
18. Twenty
six percent of treated children, as compared to 11% of untreated, cleared
HBe ag at one year, and 33 % at 18 months. HBe ag loss was also more rapidly
observed in inteferon treated patients than in natural seroconverters.
Ten percent of treated patients lost also HBs antigen, versus 1% of controls.
Beside
interferon, Lamivudine has emerged as a new treatment alternative in chronic
hepatitis B infected individuals 21**. Given in adults at a dosis of 100
mg once daily, the drug is able to inhibit rapidly viral replication,
and promote HBe ag loss in 16% versus 4% of controls at one year. Seventy
two percent of the patients normalised transaminases as compared with
24% in the placebo group. Liver necroinflammatory score improved in 56%
of treated patients versus 25% of placebo treated patients. However, genotypic
mutations (YMDD) were demonstrated in 14% of treated patients, but not
in placebo patients 21,22. A pediatric pharmacokinetic study has determined that clearance of lamivudine was higher in young children, and reached adult profile from twelve years old. In young children, the recommended dosis is 3mg/kg, once daily 23. Currently, long term lamivudine treatment is being investigated for chronic hepatitis B in children.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is relatively infrequent in childhood, even in endemic areas, due to the lower exposure of children to efficient routes of transmission such as transfusions (in the past years), drug abuse and other percutaneous routes 24. For this reason some
aspects of infection and associated liver disease, such as the natural
history and the efficacy of therapy, are largely undefined. In fact most
attention in recent years has been devoted to the epidemiological aspects
of infection, with particular respect to vertical transmission. The risk of transmission
was unrelated to breast feeding and to caesarean delivery. The safety
of breast feeding from asymptomatic mothers with HCV infection is also
reported by Kumar et al. 26. The authors, however, describe putative transmission
by breast milk in three children delivered by cesarean section who become
viremic at 3 months of age, when their mothers developed symptomatic hepatitis.
Independently of its low efficiency, vertical transmission has become the main route for pediatric HCV infection after the introduction of blood screening. Bortolotti at al. 30* investigated the routes of transmission in 106 consecutive, anti-HCV positive Italian children without underlying diseases and found that 93% of those born after 1990 had an anti-HCV positive mother, while 54% of older children had been transfused.; 45% of infected mothers had a history of covert percutaneous exposure, while one third reported drug abuse. The authors suggest that, following the adoption of general preventive measures, maternal drug abuse is likely to remain the most important source of infection for children in the Western world 30*. The American Academy
of Pediatric thus recommends screening infants born to HCV-infected mothers
and persons with risk factors for HCV such as injection drug use, transfusions
received before 1992 or hemodyalisis 31. Further management
of patients was not homogeneous because the authors either protracted
treatment or retreated some patients, thus introducing several biases
which prevent an accurate evaluation of sustained response and of predictors
of response. Vegnente et al 38 treated 25 otherwise healthy children with
recombinant alpha 2b interferon at the dose of 5MU/m2 for 12 months and
obtained a complete response in only 12% at the end of treatment and of
8% at the end of a further 12 months follow-up. For this reason a combination therapy with a standard dose of interferon associated with ribavirin administered orally has been experimented in adult patients. McHutchison et al 41** used a combination of interferon and ribavirin, administered at the dose of 1000-1200 mg per day, for 24 or 48 weeks. The rate of sustained response, defined as an undetectable serum HCV RNA 24 weeks after treatment was completed, was 31 and 30% respectively, versus 13% in patients who received interferon alone for 48 weeks. These encouraging
results are confirmed by the effect of combination therapy in patients
who relapsed after a course of interferon. Davis et al. 42** could obtain
a sustained response in 48% of patients versus 8% of patients retreated
with interferon alone. There is so far no experiences of combination therapy
in children with hepatitis C. The prevention of HCV transmission, in the
absence of vaccine, relies on general preventive measures. A further improvement
of blood screening by introducing polymerase chain reaction screening
of blood donations for HCV RNA has been recently proposed 43. Suggestions
regarding the opportunity of cesarean section for children of infected
mothers are not currently supported by sufficient data.
However, cirrhosis
and hepatocarcinoma are a reality for young adults, and vaccination has
been shown to reduce this risk. Treatment with interferon or lamivudine
yield an insufficient success rate, and very long term studies and new
therapeutic tools are needed to convince paediatricians that children
in the early stage of the disease may benefit from treatment .
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