Objective: To test the hypothesis that many patients with alcoholic liver disease have coexisting hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection which promotes the development of cirrhosis.
Design: Prospective, two-centre study comparing patients with alcoholic liver disease with HCV-positive blood donors identified by the Regional Blood Transfusion Service.
Setting: Two teaching hospitals in Glasgow, UK.
Patients: Sixty patients admitted to hospital with a diagnosis of alcoholic liver disease on the basis of clinical and histological tests. For comparison, a group of 50 anti-HCV-positive subjects identified from 305,012 blood donors during the same period (1991-1993) were questioned about their alcohol consumption and liver biopsy specimens are taken.
Main outcome measures: The prevalence of HCV infection was determined by a second generation enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for anti-HCV and by liver histology.
Results: No patients with alcoholic liver disease were anti-HCV-positive. Of the blood donors with chronic HCV infection, 11 (22%) reported previous or continuing consumption of more than 80 g alcohol daily for at least 2 consecutive years but liver histology in all 50 cases showed features characteristic of chronic HCV. There was no difference in liver histology between donors with a history of high alcohol consumption [mean grade 2.6 (range, 1-5), stage 0.4 (range, 0-2)] and abstinent, anti-HCV-positive donors [grade 2.8 (0-5), stage 0.5 (range 0-1)].
Conclusions: The absence of anti-HCV in this population of patients with alcoholic liver disease shows that HCV is not a necessary or a common cofactor in the development of alcoholic liver disease in the west of Scotland.