Background
The joint effect of the interaction of alcohol intake, hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C
virus (HCV) on the risk of cirrhosis is still unexplored because a large sample size is required
for this investigation.
Objective
Evaluation of interaction of HBV, HCV and alcohol abuse on the risk of cirrhosis.
Design
We analysed 12,262 consecutive patients with chronic liver disease of various aetiologies referring to 95 Italian liver units in 2001 or 2014. To evaluate the interaction between alcohol abuse,
HBV infection, and HCV infection, patients unexposed to either factors were used as reference
category. Adjustment for BMI and age was done by multiple logistic regression analysis.
Results
Females were older than males (p<0.01) and less frequently showed HBV and alcoholic
aetiology (p<0.01). In both sexes, an overtime increasing age and an increasing proportion
of subjects with liver cirrhosis was observed, reflecting a better survival (0.01).An additive interaction is observed in females: the O.R. generated by the simultaneous
presence of HBV, HCV, and alcohol (5.09; 95% C.I. 1.06–24.56) exceeds the sum (4.14) of
the O.R. generated by a single exposure (O.R. = 0.72 for HBsAg positivity, OR = 1.34 for antiHCV positivity, and O.R. = 2.08 for alcohol intake). No interaction is observed in male sex.
Conclusions
The observed gender difference suggests that the simultaneous presence of HBV/HCV
coinfection and risky alcohol intake enhances the mechanism of liver damage to a greater
extent in females than in males