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Hepatitis C In Pregnancy Craig V. Towers, M.D. F.A.C.O.G. Professor Dept. Obstetrics & Gynecology Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine University Tennessee Medical Center, Knoxville Disclosures I have no disclosures or conflicts of interest Viral Hepatitis Hepatitis viruses – A/B/C/D/E and G/TT ?? CMV - cytomegalovirus EBV - Epstein-Barr virus HSV I and II - herpes virus types I and II Coxsackie virus and mumps virus Hepatitis C Areas to Cover History Impact Classification Structure Lab Work-up General Transmission Vertical Transmission Mode of Delivery Fetal Scalp Electrode Duration of ROM Breastfeeding Treatment “Straws” NON “A” NON “B” (1950’s through 1980’s) viral type was unknown at least 2 forms existed parenterally transmission - percutaneous / permucosal #1 cause of post-transfusion hepatitis no marker existed so the true impact of the disease was unknown Perinatal transmission was thought to occur but the exact risk was unknown Hepatitis C Virus 1989 - Choo and Kuo identified RNA virus classified as a separate genus to flavivirus RNA virus that is 9379 to 9481 nucleotides long and is 30 to 38 nm in diameter HCV Public Impact HCV – Consensus Conf. 2010 170 - 200 million carriers worldwide 4.1 million infected in the United States 3.2 to 3.5 million chronic carriers in the USA 80% asymptomatic – 20% symptomatic 10% - 30% chronic carriers progress to cirrhosis ~ 2% - 5% risk of hepatocellular CA per year Potential impact on healthcare is enormous Hepatitis C Virus Genetic Variants 7 major genotypes exist (over 225 subtypes / species) 1 – over 35 and counting 2 – over 40 and counting 3 – over 25 and counting 4 – over 50 and counting 5 – over 60 and counting 6 – 8 and counting 7 – only 1 (so far) The most common geno/subtypes in Europe, USA, and Japan are 1a, 1b, 2a, 2b, 3a, 4a, and 6a Genotype 1 is the most resistant to treatment Hepatitis C Virus Cell Culture Cell culture-derived HCV became a reality in 2005 by 3 different groups (Lindenbach et al, Wakita et al, and Zhong et al) This has allowed every step of the viral life cycle to be studied including viral entry – replication – virion assembly – and release Animal hosts are still limited (non-human primates ?? / human liver transplanted mice, etc.) Hepatitis C Virus Structure Structural proteins (3) Core protein Envelope proteins E1 and E2 Nonstructural proteins (8) P7 ion channel protein / NS2 protease / NS3-4A complex protease / NTPase-RNA helicase / NS4B / NS5A / NS5B RNA-dependent RNA polymerase Orange is the assembly module & Green is the replication module Hepatitis C Virus Hepatocyte Entry HCV enters the blood stream HCV envelope glycoproteins E1 & E2 bind to apolipoproteins (B, C1, and E) of circulating VLDL and LDL lipoproteins These (HCV) lipoviral particles then physically circulate together and this union allows the viral particle to gain access to the hepatocyte It enters the cell through receptor-mediated endocytosis Hepatitis C Virus MicroRNAs Cells contain microRNAs of ~ 22 nucleotides These inhibit and help degrade the translation (into proteins) of messenger RNAs that contain only partially complemented sequences of RNA The most abundant microRNA in the liver is microRNA-122 microRNA-122 binds to all types of HCV but instead of destroying HCV it protects it All genotypes require microRNA-122 to survive Hepatitis C Virus LABORATORY EVALUATION CDC-MMWR – May 2013 screening tests – are rapid HCV antibody tests Calculate signal-to-cut-off ratios Measure the optical density absorbance of (HCV) antibody present compared to the optical density cut off for that specific test high false positive rate in low risk population Hepatitis C Virus LABORATORY EVALUATION CDC-MMWR – May 2013 Positive screening tests would then be confirmed with a RIBA RIBA is a series of antibodies to HCV from more than one region of the virus No longer available as of mid-2012 *** Confirmatory test is HCV-RNA by PCR 5 Qualitative tests and 7 Quantitative tests Hepatitis C Virus LABORATORY EVALUATION Positive HCV antibody screen and a negative HCV-RNA PCR ??? Never infected (false positive screen) ??? Infected but is one of ~ 20% that develops immunity Implications of this can affect insurability and the ??? of possible reactivation later in life ??? Hepatitis C Virus General Transmission The main concern is transmission from blood or blood products post-transfusion IV drug abuse organ transplantation Others (tattoo ink or needles ?? / straws ??) Perinatal – vertical transmission occurs Sexual transmission – rare Hepatitis C Virus VERTICAL TRANSMISSION all infants are anti-HCV positive at birth the antibody in most cases clears within 12 months, but can last up to 18 months at this time, no proven treatment exists to prevent vertical transmission the anti-HCV antibody is not protective Hepatitis C Virus VERTICAL TRANSMISSION Over 450 studies have been published on this topic – the data is still not clear From studies analyzing anti-HCV positive pregnant women – the average perinatal transmission rate is about 5% (with a range of 0% to 14%) The transmission rate in patients who are HCV and HIV co-infected is 15% to 23% Hepatitis C Virus Diagnosis of VERTICAL TRANSMISSION Diagnosis is positive HCV-RNA on 2 occasions 3 to 4 months apart after the infant is at least 2 months of age and/or a positive HCV antibody after 18 months of age Recent data has shown that transmission primarily only occurs in pregnant patients who are HCV-RNA positive by PCR at the time of delivery (with transmission rates of 3% to 8%) Most vertical transmission occurs intrapartum Hepatitis C Virus Timing of VERTICAL TRANSMISSION No infant has ever been delivered with active acute HCV infection Sensitivity of PCR For HCV – up to ~ 7 x 107 viral particles / cc Newborn has approx. 80cc blood / kg body weight Assume HCV-RNA + mom (with 106 viral load / cc) delivers a 4000 gram baby If 1 tenth of 1cc of mother’s blood gets into the baby ------ There would be 313 viral particles / cc in the baby’s blood Perinatal Transmission and Mode of Delivery Cochrane Review 2010 Hepatitis C & Mode of Delivery No randomized controlled trials have occurred No overall benefit to cesarean section Perinatal Transmission and Mode of Delivery Cottrell et al – Annals of IM 2013 – US Task Force 4 studies on elective c-section prior to onset of labor versus vaginal or cesarean section after labor onset Study EPHcN (good) Year 2005 # 1404 Mast et al (good) McMenamin (fair) 2005 2008 181 441 Gibb et al (fair) Total 2000 424 2450 Results 35/480 (7.3%) v 50/924 (5.4%) p=.19 0/12 v 7/169 (4.1%) p=.61 1/33 (3%) v 17/408 (4.2%) p=.60 0/31 v 29/393 (7.4%) p=.10 36/556 (6.5%) versus 103/1894 (5.4%) p=.80 Cesarean Section Neonate Perinatal Transmission HCV Fetal Scalp Electrode Cottrell et al – Annals of IM 2013 – US Task Force 2 studies (905 MC pairs) on FSE versus External 2 good quality studies Mast et al 2005 (USA) – 3/16 (18.8%) with FSE versus 4/165 no FSE (2.4%) p=0.02 EPHcN 2001 – 11/93 with FSE (11.8%) versus 58/631 (9.2%) no FSE p=.54 Combined data 14/109 (12.8%) versus 62/796 (7.8%) p=.10 Perinatal Transmission HCV Duration of Membrane Rupture Cottrell et al – Annals of IM 2013 – US Task Force 2 studies (245 MC pairs) 1 good / 1 poor quality Mast et al 2005 (USA) – 182 MC pairs 0/53 (0%) < 1 hour 1/59 (1.7%) 1-5 hours 4/40 (10%) 6-12 hours 2/30 (6.7%) > 13 hours Membrane rupture duration of > 6 hours p=0.02 Spencer et al 1997 (Australia) – 63 MC pairs HCV infected mean duration ROM 28 hours (+/- 10 hours) HCV non-infected duration ROM 16 hours (+/- 4 Hours) p=0.03 Hepatitis C Virus and Amniocentesis Delmare et al 1999 Hepatology 22 HCV antibody positive amniocentesis cases (16 HCV-RNA positive) 21 fluids HCV-RNA negative – 1 was positive at 230 copies/mL (mom at 340,000 copies/mL) – the procedure was transplacental This child and 9 others tested at birth were HCV-RNA negative – conclusion was maternal contamination since transplacental Hepatitis C Virus and Viral Load / Genotype 6 studies found a higher transmission rate with higher viral loads – all small studies (1994, 1994,1995, 1995, 2000, 2001) Transmission was seen in cases that were HCV-RNA negative ??? 3 studies did not find viral load an issue – (1998, 2000, 2005) No critical titer has been found if it is a risk No study has found any genotype a greater risk Hepatitis C Virus and Breast-Feeding Several studies have evaluated breast milk for HCV-RNA and most samples are negative – a few are positive (?? Maternal blood ??) It is uncertain whether the virus can withstand the intestinal tract ACOG – Practice Bulletin #86 – October 2007 (reaffirmed 2012) states that breast-feeding is not contraindicated (AAP-ACOG 2006 BreastFeeding Handbook) Hepatitis C Virus Perinatal Transmission Summary Timing of transmission is intrapartum in most cases Mode of delivery – Cesarean section prior to labor ??? Co-infection with HIV increases the risk Fetal scalp electrode +/– increases the risk Membrane rupture duration may increase the risk Amniocentesis risk is unknown Higher viral load increases the risk but at what titer ?? Genotype does not appear to be an issue Breast Feeding is considered acceptable Hepatitis C Virus Neonatal Infection Zuccotti et al 2006 – 17 HCV infected neonates All had elevated ALT’s 16 had positive HCV-RNA PCR at 3 months Only one had positive HCV-RNA at 12 months Several other small reports describe positive HCV-RNA at delivery but negative later Does the immune system of some neonates fight off infection or is the newborn liver more resistant ??? – does it take a certain level of inoculum to cause infection ??? Hepatitis C Virus Treatment Treatment recommendations still complex With the addition of Ribavirin to pegylated interferon alpha-2a 80% long term response with genotypes 2-6 40% long term response with genotype 1 Relapses still occur, especially genotype 1 Cure is defined as HCV-RNA negative 24 weeks after drug treatment completion Hepatitis C Virus Treatment Explosion Boceprevir and Telaprevir are NS3/4A protease inhibitors for use with genotype 1 (approved 2011) Cure rates are up to 70% to 80% Issues, however, are side effects / DAA-resistance / complex dosing schedule Sofosbuvir (nucleoside inhibitor of RNA-dependent RNA polymerase) for use in all genotypes especially for those that cannot take PEG-INF (approved 2013) Hepatitis C Virus New Treatments Over 35 more Anti-HCV DAA’s are in FDA Phase I and II trials that are targeting: NS3-4A protease Nucleoside inhibitors of HCV RNA-dependent RNA polymerase Non-nucleoside inhibitors of HCV RNA-dependent RNA polymerase NS5A inhibitors Cyclophilin inhibitors micro-RNA-122 antagonists (Miravirsen) Hepatitis C Virus Treatment in Pregnancy Pegylated-Interferon alpha-2a not recommended for use during pregnancy Ribavirin not recommended for use during pregnancy ??? New DAA’s and others ??? HCV Vaccine Many hurdles exist in the development of an effective HCV vaccine 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Only way to test infectivity is HCV-RNA PCR Only species to be infected – humans Many HCV viral proteins have high mutability 7 different genotypes (over 200 species) No currently identified antibody kills the virus HCV Epidemic Huge number of opiate abusers (60% +) in Tennessee are also HCV infected HCV testing is now a routine part of our prenatal care laboratory assessment Many patients strongly argued that they did not use intravenous drugs nor had they ever used IV drugs in the past HCV Epidemic in East Tennessee Could it be snorting utensils ? Straws ? HCV Infection Risk Factor Study Purpose Fernandez, Towers et al. Obstetrics & Gynecology August 2016 To evaluate possible modes of HCV transmission through common routes, as well as, possible straw transmission in HCV-infected pregnant women Methods Prospective study of pregnant women who were HCV-RNA positive Anonymous survey with no patient identification March 2014 through June 2015 21 questions with 6 sub-questions on a single page Methods To test biological plausibility we obtained snorting utensils (straws) from local law enforcement agencies that were confiscated from drug arrests Tested these for the presence of human blood Results 189 HCV-infected pregnant patients were consented Mean age 26.5 – 84% Caucasian None were HIV positive None had received a blood or clotting transfusion or organ transplant prior to 1992 None were on hemodialysis Results 136 (72%) admitted to IV drug use 89 (65%) admitted to sharing needles etc. This 89 represents 47% of the study group 178 (94%) admitted to sorting drugs 164 (92%) admitted to sharing straws This 164 represents 87% of the study group This difference was highly significant p <.001 Results 29 (15%) HCV-infected pregnant women snorted drugs and shared straws but were negative for all other potential risk factors except sexual transmission 80 (42%) patients reported sharing snorting utensils but denied sharing needles/syringes Results 133 (70%) did not know when they became infected with HCV 127 (67%) found out they were infected with HCV from the routine prenatal lab work drawn at the start of prenatal care Results 54 straws were obtained from local law enforcement agencies (a different population of patients from the study group) 13 (24%) tested positive for human blood A Future Concern 95% of the drugs snorted were crushed prescription opiates If HIV gets into the blood pool of Appalachia we will have even a greater problem Conclusions Sharing of snorting utensils (straws) in the process of snorting opiates (or any other drug) is probably an additional risk factor becoming infected with HCV (or any other blood-borne viral infection) Questions