Objectives: To evaluate whether peculiar histological changes are present in liver tissue of patients with chronic hepatitis by hepatitis B and hepatitis C (HBV and HCV) virus combined infections.
Methods: We studied liver biopsy specimens from 14 HB surface antigen/anti-HCV-positive patients consecutively admitted to hospital because of chronic liver disease from 1987 to 1992. Alcohol abusers, drug addicts, hepatitis delta virus- and HIV-infected subjects were excluded from the study. All of them were positive for serum HBV-DNA and/or intrahepatic HB core antigen and for serum HCV-RNA. Histological examination showed mild or moderate chronic hepatitis in nine cases and severe chronic hepatitis with cirrhosis in five cases. Two additional sets of liver biopsy specimens were also included in the study, consisting of liver samples from 14 patients with chronic liver disease due to active HBV infection alone (group B) and from 14 patients with active HCV infection alone (group C). Cases from group B and C matched for age, sex, and histological diagnosis with those from group B + C. Histological patterns of all the liver specimens of the three groups were re-examined by two authors who scored the found features using a scale from 0 to 3.
Results: No peculiar histological pattern was revealed in group B + C, and most of the detected microscopic features were similarly present in all three groups. Bile duct lesions and well defined lymphoid follicles were found only in liver samples of patients from groups C and B + C. Ground-glass hepatocytes were observed only in cases from the groups B and B + C.
Conclusions: Histological examination of liver tissue from patients with chronic HBV and HCV combined infection does not show either typical patterns or evidence that this subgroup of chronic viral hepatitis is a more severe form of liver disease than that caused by a single virus infection. The observation in liver samples of peculiar lesions by HBV or HCV infection does not exclude a combined infection by both viruses.