Review Article
Hepatitis Delta Virus: Epidemiology, Natural Course and Treatment
Philippe Sultanik and Stanislas Pol* | |
Department of Hepatology, Paris Descartes University, France | |
*Corresponding Author : | Stanislas Pol Department of Hepatology Paris Descartes University, France Tel: 33158413001 Fax: +33158413015 E-mail: stanislas.pol@aphp.fr |
Received date: January 20, 2016; Accepted date: February 25, 2016; Published date: March 03, 2016 | |
Citation: Sultanik P, Pol S (2016) Hepatitis Delta Virus: Epidemiology, Natural Course and Treatment. J Infect Dis Ther 4:271. doi: 10.4172/2332-0877.1000271 | |
Copyright: © 2016 Sultanik P, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. |
Abstract
The delta virus (HDV) is a defective hepatotropic virus that affects only patients with hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. These 2 viruses share the same routes of transmission (parenteral, sexual, and mother to child). The hepatitis delta virus infection may result in acute hepatitis, including fulminant presentation or spontaneously resolving infection, and chronic infection. The prognosis depends on the chronology of the 2 infections, co-infection (higher risk of fulminant hepatitis) or super-infection (frequent evolution to chronicity). The harmfull impact of HIVassociated infection is today debated even if HDV antibodies are present in 12% and 4% of HIV/HBV co-infected and HBV-mono-infected patients respectively. HDV may be treated by interferon, the unique treatment, but relapse is observed in 50% of cases after discontinuation of therapy: only 25% of treated patients achieved a sustained virologic response. Entry HBV/HDV inhibitors (Myrcludex) and prenylation inhibitors are awaited encouraging progress in treating HDV infection. The treatment is recommended in patients with significant fibrosis; viral suppression may result in fibrosis stabilization or reversal which may be also observed in the absence of complete viral eradication. The prevention of hepatitis delta virus infection is based on hepatitis B virus vaccination