Hepatitis viruses cause liver disease as their chief or sole manifestation
Hepatitis A
Transmission
- Faecal-oral spread
- Linked to poor hygiene/overcrowding
- Some cases imported and some clusters e.g. gay men and PWID but importance has declined in UK
Clinical features
- Acute hepatitis, no chronic infection
- Peak incidence of symptomatic disease in older children/young adults
- Vaccination for those at risk e.g. travel vaccine
Hepatitis E
Transmission
- Faecal-oral transmission in the tropics
- Cases acquired in UK are thought to be zoonoses
Clinical features
- Tropical genotype associated with severe disease in pregnant women
- Some immunocompromised humans can get chronic infection
- No vaccine yet available
Hepatitis D
- Only found with Hepatitis B - exacerbates Hep B infection
Hepatitis B
Transmission
- Sex
- Mother to child
- Blood to blood (unscreened transfusions, tattoos)
Risk factors
- People born in areas of higher prevalence
- Multiple sexual partners
- PWIDs
- Children of infected mothers
Clinical features
- Chronic disease is more likely to result if first exposure is in childhood
- Spontaneous cure is not uncommon, even after years of infection
Control
- Minimize exposure - safe blood, safe sex, needle exchange etc.
- Vaccinations - all children born August 2017 onwards, at-risk others
- Post-exposure prophylaxis - vaccine and hyperimmune Hep B immunoglobin (HBIG)
Hepatitis C
Transmission + risk factors
- Same as Hep B
Clinical features
- Infection results in chronic infection in ~75% of cases
- No vaccine - minimize exposure
- Strongly associated with hepatocellular carcinoma
- Once chronic infection is established, spontaneous cure is not seen
Clinical presentation
- May be asymptomatic
- Abdominal pain
- Fatigue
- Pruritis
- Muscle and joint aches
- Nausea and vomiting
- Jaundice
- Fever
Investigations
All hepatitis viruses
- Serology - relevant IgM usually detectable by onset of illness
Hepatitis B
- Serology
- Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) present in blood of all infectious individuals, present for 6+ months in chronic infection
- Hepatitis Be antigen (HBeAg) usually presents in highly infectious individuals
- Hep B IgM more likely to be present in recently infected cases
- Anti-HBs present in immunity (vaccine or past infection)

- PCR
- Hep B virus DNA presents in high titre in highly infectious individuals
- Can be used to predict risk of chronic disease and monitor therapy
Hepatitis C
- Serology
- If serology positive → PCR (HCV RNA)
- (+) serology but (-) PCR = past infection
- (+) serology and (+) PCR = current infection
Management of chronic viral hepatitis
Antivirals
- Chronic hep B - suppressive antiviral drug (more widely used) OR peginterferon alone (sustained cure possible in minority of cases)
- Chronic hep C - choice of antiviral regime based on many factors; aim is >90% SVR
- Cirrhotic patients at those at risk of complications treated as priority
Supportive Therapy
For symptomatic patients
- Fever → Ibuprofen 400 mg 2x1 (don’t use Paracetamol, it is hepatotoxic)
- Nausea & vomiting → Metoclopramide 10 mg 3x1 OR Domperidone 10 mg 3x1
- Bloating → H2 blocker (Cimetidine 200 mg 3x1 OR Ranitidine 150 mg 2x1) OR PPI (Omeprazole 20 mg 1x1)
- Hepatoprotector → Curcuma 1x1
Other
- Vaccination
- Decrease alcohol intake
- Hepatocellular carcinoma awareness/screening
- Serum AFT and USS
- Even after SVR target reached in chronic hep C, carcinoma screening should continue