Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is the most frequently observed viral infection in patients with kidney disease. HCV can cause glomerular disease, which can lead to end-stage renal disease that requires dialysis and/or kidney transplantation. It is recommended to test HCV patients once a year for proteinuria, microscopic hematuria and estimated glomerular filtration rate. Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis is the most common glomerular disease induced by HCV. Over the past few decades, the prevalence of HCV infection has decreased among dialysis and kidney transplant patients. However, survival is significantly lower in HCV-positive than in HCV-negative dialysis patients whereas survival is significantly better in HCV-positive kidney transplant patients compared with HCV-positive dialysis patients. Thus, dialysis patients without a sustained virological response after anti-HCV therapy should be proposed for kidney transplantation. Recurrence or de novo occurrence of glomerular disease is responsible for the lower kidney allograft survival in HCV-positive compared with HCV-negative kidney transplant patients. Dialysis and kidney transplantation do not appear to negatively affect progression of liver fibrosis in the majority of patients. The available data also suggest that occult HCV infection does not exist in dialysis and kidney transplant patients.
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