African
Americans Fare Worse After Undergoing
Liver Transplantation Due to Hepatitis C
Alexandria,
VA and Boston, MA -- October 31, 2009 -- Previous
studies have shown that hepatitis C virus (HCV)
progresses slower prior to liver transplantation
in African Americans than in whites. However, researchers
demonstrate in this study, which will be presented
at the annual meeting of the American Association
for the Study of Liver Diseases, that the opposite
is true after transplantation, in that recurrent
HCV in the transplanted liver progresses faster
in African Americans than in whites. "I believe
this study highlights the need, in all patients,
for early close clinical monitoring, including the
use of early protocol biopsies, to identify these
patients that have early disease progression post-transplantation,"
said Jennifer Layden, MD, PhD, principal investigator
on this study.
This
retrospective multisite cohort study of 771 patients
from 5 sites evaluated patients who had a liver transplantation
between 1999 and 2008. All patients were transplanted
due to liver failure caused by HCV. Data were analyzed
at 6 months, 1 year, and 2 years after transplantation.
The
researchers found, based on an analysis of liver biopsies
performed after transplantation, that African Americans
had more severe fibrosis progression and histologic
inflammation compared to whites following liver transplantation
for HCV. While Hispanics demonstrated similar disease
progression after liver transplantation as whites,
African Americans more often experienced graft failure
and required repeat liver transplantation compared
to whites. In addition, the hazard ratio for patient
death for African Americans was 1.3, indicating a
30% higher mortality for African Americans compared
to whites. The researchers concluded that African
Americans who undergo liver transplantation caused
by HCV had more severe fibrosis progression and histologic
inflammation compared to whites undergoing the same
procedure.
"While
this study illustrates that HCV histologic progression
occurs early and is more aggressive in African Americans,
it does not allow a careful analysis of factors that
may be contributing to these differences," concluded
Dr. Layden, "we are conducting a multi-site prospective
study to not only confirm these retrospective findings,
but also examine both donor and host factors, including
psychosocial, virologic, genetic and immunologic that
may contribute to this important health disparity."
About
the AASLD
AASLD
is the leading medical society focused solely on advancing
the science and practice of hepatology and represents
more than 3,300 practitioners, researchers, and allied
health professionals worldwide. Founded by physicians
in 1950, AASLD has upheld the standards of the profession
and fostered research that generates treatment options
for the millions of patients with liver diseases.
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