Clinical Trial: Seroprevalence of Hepatitis E in People With an Organ Transplant

Study Status: Recruiting
Recruit Status: Recruiting
Study Type: Observational

Official Title: Hepatitis E in the Organ Transplant Population

Brief Summary:

Background:

- The hepatitis E virus causes an acute hepatitis that usually goes away by itself. Researchers in France studied people who received a liver or kidney transplant. They found that hepatitis E may not go away by itself in these people. It becomes chronic. This can cause serious liver disease. More than half the people who had organ transplant who had hepatitis E seemed to get a chronic infection.

Researchers want to find out if hepatitis E happens this often in patients who have liver, kidney, or small bowel transplants in the United States. If it does, they want to know why. They want to know if chronic hepatitis E will become an important medical problem. This research might help improve care for people who have a transplant. It also might help researchers prevent the spread of hepatitis E.

Objective:

- To see how many patients who have received or are waiting for certain transplants have antibodies to hepatitis E virus.

Eligibility:

- Adults over age 18 who have had a liver, kidney, liver and kidney, or small bowel transplant, or are on a waiting list for one.

Design:

  • Participants will be enrolled from 3 transplant centers.
  • Participants will complete a questionnaire. They will be asked about possible risk factors for hepatitis E exposure.
  • Participants will have a blood sample drawn through a needle placed in a vein.

Detailed Summary: Hepatitis E virus infection commonly presents as an acute self-limiting hepatitis in the developing world. However there have been reports that chronic hepatitis E may develop in immunocompromised subjects such as renal and liver transplant recipients. Progression to cirrhosis has also been reported in patients with chronic hepatitis E infection. We hypothesize that immunosuppression post-organ transplantation predisposes individuals to increased susceptibility to hepatitis E infection. Therefore, in this study, we wish to determine the seroprevalence of antibody to hepatitis E IgG in organ transplant recipients (an immunosuppressed population) and compare it to patients who are on organ transplant waitlist (not immunosuppressed). We plan to study samples and date from 300 organ transplant recipients and 300 patients on waitlist for liver, kidney or intestinal transplantation and control for age, gender, organ and transplant center. Three transplant centers (2 in the mid-Atlantic area and one in the Mid-West) will each enroll 100 cases and controls. A minimum of 50 cases at each site will be liver transplant recipients. Cases will be stratified based on number of years post transplant one, two or greater than or equal to three years. Consecutive patients who are eligible and agree to participate in the study will be enrolled. A brief questionnaire to assess risk factors for acquisition of hepatitis E will be administered and 8mls of blood will be drawn in a serum separator tube for anti HEV IgG, anti HEV IgM and HEV RNA testing analysis at the NIH. Subjects who are confirmed to have acute or chronic HEV infection will be managed according to standard of care at each respective transplant centers.
Sponsor: National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)

Current Primary Outcome: Prevalence of Hep E [ Time Frame: End of study ]

Original Primary Outcome: Prevalence of Hep E [ Time Frame: 2 yrs ]

Current Secondary Outcome: Outcome of Chronic Hepatitis E [ Time Frame: End of study ]

Original Secondary Outcome: Outcome of Chronic Hepatitis E [ Time Frame: 2 yrs ]

Information By: National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)

Dates:
Date Received: July 12, 2014
Date Started: July 6, 2014
Date Completion: December 31, 2017
Last Updated: April 21, 2017
Last Verified: February 27, 2017