Abstract
In a prospective study of the natural course of acute hepatitis, 157 of 1020 patients with biopsy-verified acute hepatitis could be classified as having hepatitis type non-A, non-B. We here report on the long-term prognosis for these 157 patients. The main type of exposure was drug addiction (40%), whereas 40% had no known hepatitis exposure. Only two patients had received blood products (blood transfusion and factor VIII). Follow-up liver biopsy (mean histological follow-up, 22 months) in 94 of the 157 patients showed chronic liver disease in 15-that is, cirrhosis in 6, suspicion of cirrhosis in 2, chronic aggressive hepatitis in 5, and chronic persistent hepatitis in 2. There was a striking predominance of elderly women with no known hepatitis exposure and with a high frequency of autoantibodies in serum among the patients with progression to chronicity, whereas chronic non-A, non-B hepatitis in drug addicts or after blood transfusions seems to be a limited problem. A comparison of histological features in the initial biopsies from patients with progression to chronicity or complete resolution showed piecemeal necrosis and abnormal bile duct epithelium to be of prognostic value.
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