Chronic 
                Hepatitis C Complications are Increasing, Especially among People 
                Older than 60 Years
              
              
                
                 
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                        | SUMMARY: 
                          The proportion of people with chronic hepatitis C virus 
                          (HCV) infection who will develop advanced liver disease 
                          including cirrhosis, decompensation, and liver cancer 
                          is likely to increase over the next 10-20 years as people 
                          infected decades ago reach the stage of developing advanced 
                          disease; these complications are expected to be especially 
                          common among people over age 60. But more widespread 
                          treatment could significantly lower projected rates 
                          of disease progression, according to a study published 
                          in the February 
                          2010 issue of Gastroenterology. |  |  |  | 
                 
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              By 
                Liz Highleyman
                
                While 
                hepatitis C incidence (new cases) has fallen dramatically since 
                HCV was discovered in the late 1980s, a growing number of people 
                who were infected decades ago are now developing advanced disease. 
                
                
                A typical scenario would be an individual who experimented with 
                injection drugs a couple of times when he was in his twenties 
                in the late 1960s. Hepatitis C 
                is often asymptomatic at early stages and screening is not routinely 
                done, so many people remain unaware that they are infected until 
                years later when they develop symptoms indicating advanced liver 
                damage.
                
                In the present study, Gary Davis from the University of Texas 
                Medical Branch and colleagues developed a mathematical model to 
                project the future prevalence (total cases) of chronic hepatitis 
                C and its complications, including cirrhosis, 
                decompensation (characterized by symptoms such as ascites, portal 
                hypertension, and bleeding esophageal varices), and hepatocellular 
                carcinoma (liver cancer).
                
                Results 
                  
              
                 
                  |  | According 
                    to the model, prevalence of chronic hepatitis C peaked in 
                    2001, at 3.6 million people. | 
                 
                  |  | Fibrosis 
                    progression was inversely related to age at infection, so 
                    cirrhosis and its complications were most common after age 
                    60 -- regardless of when infection actually occurred. | 
                 
                  |  | The 
                    proportion of individuals with chronic hepatitis C who will 
                    develop cirrhosis is projected to reach 25% in 2010 and 45% 
                    in 2030. | 
                 
                  |  | The 
                    total number of people with HCV-related cirrhosis is expected 
                    to peak at 1.0 million -- about 30% higher than the current 
                    level -- in 2020, and then begin to decline. | 
                 
                  |  | The 
                    model suggests that rates of liver cancer and hepatic decompensation 
                    will continue to increase for another 10 to 13 years. | 
                 
                  |  | However, 
                    treatment of all HCV-infected patients in 2010 -- assuming 
                    current rates of treatment response -- could dramatically 
                    reduce the risk of adverse clinical outcomes by 2020, according 
                    to the model: | 
                 
                  |  | 
                       
                        |  | Cirrhosis: 
                          16% reduction; |   
                        |  | Decompensation: 
                          42% reduction; |   
                        |  | Liver 
                          cancer: 31% reduction; |   
                        |  | Liver-related 
                          death: 36% reduction. |  | 
              
              Based 
                on these findings, the researchers concluded, "Incidence 
                of hepatitis C cirrhosis and its complications will continue to 
                increase through the next decade and will mostly affect those 
                older than 60 years of age."
                
                "Current treatment patterns will have little effect on these 
                complications," they continued, "but wider application 
                of antiviral treatment and better responses with new agents could 
                significantly reduce the impact of this disease in coming years."
                
                Infectious Disease Epidemiology Program, University of Texas 
                Medical Branch, Galveston, TX; Division of Hepatology, Baylor 
                University Medical Center and Baylor Regional Transplant Institute, 
                Dallas, TX; Assistance Publique Hôpitaux de Paris, Université 
                Pierre et Marie Curie Liver Center, Paris, France; Baylor College 
                of Medicine and Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center, 
                Houston, TX.
                
                3/30/10
                
                Reference
                GL 
                Davis, MJ Alter, H El-Serag, and others. Aging of the Hepatitis 
                C Virus-Infected Persons in the United States: A Multiple Cohort 
                Model of HCV Prevalence and Disease Progression. Gastroenterology 
                138(2): 513-521 (Abstract). 
                February 2010.