• Title of article

    Chronic hepatitis B virus infection in Sjögrenʹs syndrome. Prevalence and clinical significance in 603 patients

  • Author/Authors

    Miguel Marcos، نويسنده , , Fausto Alvarez، نويسنده , , Pilar Brito-Zer?n، نويسنده , , Albert Bove، نويسنده , , Marta Perez-De-Lis، نويسنده , , Candido Diaz-Lagares، نويسنده , , Jose-Maria Sanchez-Tapias، نويسنده , , Manuel Ramos-Casals، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
  • Pages
    5
  • From page
    616
  • To page
    620
  • Abstract
    Objective To analyze the prevalence and clinical characteristics of chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in a large series of patients with Sjögren syndrome (SS). Methods We investigated the prevalence of chronic HBV infection in 603 consecutive patients with SS diagnosed in our department between 1994 and 2008. There were 517 patients with primary SS (482 women and 35 men, with a mean age at the time of fulfillment of the classification criteria of 57 years) and 86 patients with SS associated with chronic HCV infection (66 women and 20 men, with a mean age at the time of fulfillment of the classification criteria of 65 years). All patients fulfilled 4 or more of the 1993 European Community Study Group criteria for SS. Results The presence of HBsAg+ was detected in five (0.83%) of the 603 patients with SS. All HBsAg+ patients had primary SS. No patient with HCV-related SS had HBV coinfection. There were 4 women and 1 man, with a mean age at diagnosis of primary SS of 65 years (range 31 to 89 years). All patients showed sicca and systemic involvement. The main extraglandular feature was articular involvement in 5 (100%) patients (including arthritis in two). The main immunologic features were RF in 4 (80%) patients and ANA in 3 (60%). No patient had hypocomplementemia, cryoglobulinemia, antimitochondrial or anti-LKM1 antibodies. Liver involvement was detected in two patients and consisted of slightly raised levels of transaminases. No patient showed clinical manifestations of liver disease such as hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, jaundice or clinical features of hepatic decompensation (ascites, encephalopathy or gastrointestinal bleeding). Conclusions We found a prevalence of chronic HBV infection of 0.83% in SS, very similar to the prevalence in general population in Spain (0.7%). In contrast to the close association between SS and HCV, chronic HBV infection is not associated with SS in our geographical area, with a ratio SS-HBV/SS-HCV cases of 1:10.
  • Keywords
    hepatitis C virus , Chronic hepatitis B , Sj?grenיs syndrome
  • Journal title
    Autoimmunity Reviews
  • Serial Year
    2009
  • Journal title
    Autoimmunity Reviews
  • Record number

    475052