Blood Tests Could Replace Liver Biopsies for Hep C
A series of blood tests was nearly as accurate at predicting the progression of liver damage as liver biopsies in people coinfected with both HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV), say the authors of a study published in the July 31 issue of AIDS. The high level of accuracy, the authors conclude, may reduce the number of liver biopsies in coinfected patients by 83 percent.
Currently, the gold standard for assessing the progression of liver damage, or fibrosis, caused by HCV infection is a liver biopsy. Unfortunately, biopsies are expensive, can be quite painful and carry the risk of internal bleeding.
To investigate whether a series of blood tests, or markers, may be as accurate as a biopsy, Daniel Suzman, MD, and his colleagues from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland, studied 100 blood and biopsy samples from 68 people coinfected with HIV and HCV. Suzman’s team found that an eight-marker system—six blood tests combined with a person’s age and whether or not he or she has used antiretroviral (ARV) HIV therapy—correctly classified the stage of liver damage 88 percent of the time.
Suzman’s team also found that a four-marker system—all blood tests—was statistically equivalent to the eight-marker system. The authors caution, however, that their systems will need to be validated in larger clinical trials before being viewed as a replacement for liver biopsies.
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Charles J Etheridge, Atlanta, 2008-07-16 15:27:55
As one who is coinfected I thought that this was very intresting. As it happens I have an appointment at the Atlanta VA on Friday to be seen by the Advanced Liver Disease Clinic and will print this and take it in with me. I am interested in being treated with VX-950 as soon as it is out of the trials, so I hope that is very soon. For the record I have been infected with HIV for nearly 30 years, but at this time one Atripla per day is keeping me undetectable.
Beth Benne, RN, is HIV negative, but
the virus has impacted her life. She currently supervises a biannual HIV/AIDS awareness week as
the director of the student health center at Pierce College, a
community commuter school in Woodland Hills, California.
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