Abstract

BackgroundHepatitis E virus (HEV) is one of the common causes of acute and chronic viral hepatitis with a global distribution. Genotypes 1 and 2 only affect humans and produce acute hepatitis epidemics in endemic regions (Asia, Africa). In nonendemic areas (America, Europe), genotypes 3 and 4 are considered a zoonosis and cause sporadic acute hepatitis. HEV has been described in solid organ transplant recipients; however, data on lung transplant patients are limited. ObjectiveTo present the first 3 cases of HEV infection in lung transplant recipients in our unit. Case PresentationWe report 3 cases of HEV infection in post-transplant patients presenting with symptoms and alterations in liver enzymes. All patients have no history of travel outside Spain prior to observing abnormalities in the liver function. Diagnoses were made with in-home polymerase chain reaction and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (IgG/IgM). The first patient was not treated and died of progressive hepatic disease, with postmortem diagnosis of HEV infection complications. The other 2 patients were treated with ribavirin after the diagnosis of HEV infection. Ribavirin was discontinued in 1 patient because of anemia necessitating red blood cell transfusions. ConclusionsHEV should be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients with abnormal liver enzymes after transplant. Early detection and treatment have implications in the prevention of liver failure and mortality. Large prospective seroprevalence studies of HEV in lung transplant patients are warranted to recognize the epidemiology of this infection in lung transplant recipients.

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