Overview of Chronic Hepatitis

BySonal Kumar, MD, MPH, Weill Cornell Medical College
Reviewed/Revised Aug 2022 | Modified Sep 2022
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Chronic hepatitis is inflammation of the liver that lasts at least 6 months.

  • Common causes include hepatitis B and C viruses and certain drugs.

  • Most people have no symptoms, but some have vague symptoms, such as a general feeling of illness, poor appetite, and fatigue.

  • Chronic hepatitis can progress to cirrhosis and ultimately liver cancer and/or liver failure.

  • A biopsy is sometimes done to confirm the diagnosis, but chronic hepatitis is usually diagnosed based on blood test results.

  • Drugs, such as antiviral drugs or corticosteroids, may be used, and for advanced disease, liver transplantation may be needed.

(See also Overview of Hepatitis, Hepatitis B, Chronic, and Hepatitis C, Chronic.)

Chronic hepatitis, although much less common than acute viral hepatitis, can persist for years, even decades. In many people, it is quite mild and does not cause significant liver damage. However, in some people, continued inflammation slowly damages the liver, eventually resulting in cirrhosis (severe scarring of the liver), liver failure, and sometimes liver cancer.

Causes of Chronic Hepatitis

The most common causes of chronic hepatitis are

Hepatitis C virus causes about 60 to 70% of cases of chronic hepatitis, and at least 75% of acute hepatitis C cases become chronic.

About 5 to 10% of hepatitis B cases in adults become chronic, sometimes with hepatitis D coinfection. (Hepatitis D does not occur by itself. It occurs only as a coinfection with hepatitis B.) Acute hepatitis B becomes chronic in up to 90% of infected newborns and in 25 to 50% of young children.

Rarely, hepatitis E virus causes chronic hepatitis in people with a weakened immune system, such as those who are taking drugs to suppress the immune system after an organ transplant, who are taking drugs to treat cancer, or who have HIV infection.

Hepatitis A virus does not cause chronic hepatitis.

Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (a type of chronic inflammation of the liver) usually occurs in people with excess body weight (obesity), diabetes, and/or abnormal levels of cholesterol and other fats (lipids) in the blood. All of these conditions cause the body to synthesize more fat or process (metabolize) and excrete fat more slowly. As a result, fat accumulates and is then stored inside liver cells (called fatty liver). Fatty liver can lead to chronic inflammation and eventually progress to cirrhosis. (Fatty liver due to any condition other than excessive consumption of alcohol is called nonalcoholic fatty liver disease.)

Alcohol, after being absorbed in the digestive tract, is usually processed (metabolized) in the liver. As alcohol is processed, substances that can damage the liver are produced. Alcohol-related liver disease typically occurs in people who drink heavily for many months or years. Alcohol-related liver disease is characterized by fatty liver and widespread liver inflammation that can result in the death of liver cells. If people continue drinking, scar tissue can form in the liver and may eventually replace a large amount of normal liver tissue, resulting in cirrhosis.

Less often, chronic hepatitis results from

In autoimmune hepatitis, the chronic inflammation resembles inflammation caused by the body attacking its own tissues (an autoimmune reaction). Autoimmune hepatitis is more common among women than men.

Certain drugs

No one knows exactly why a particular virus or drug causes chronic hepatitis in some people but not in others or why the degree of severity varies.

Did You Know...

  • Chronic hepatitis may not be suspected until after cirrhosis develops.

Symptoms of Chronic Hepatitis

In about two thirds of people, chronic hepatitis develops gradually, often without causing any symptoms of a liver disorder until cirrhosis occurs. In the remaining one third, it develops after a bout of acute viral hepatitis that persists or returns (often several weeks later).

Chronic hepatitis often causes general symptoms, such as a vague feeling of illness (malaise), poor appetite, and fatigue. Sometimes affected people also have a low-grade fever and some discomfort in the upper abdomen. Jaundice (a yellow discoloration of the skin and whites of the eyes caused by deposits of excess bilirubin) is rare unless liver failure develops. Many people with chronic hepatitis have no symptoms.

Often, the first specific symptoms occur when liver disease has progressed and there is evidence of cirrhosis. Symptoms can include

Brain function deteriorates because the badly damaged liver cannot remove toxic substances from the blood as it normally does. These substances then build up in the blood and reach the brain. Normally, the liver removes them from the blood, breaks them down, then excretes them as harmless by-products into the bile (the greenish yellow fluid that aids in digestion) or blood (see Functions of the Liver). Treatment of hepatic encephalopathy can prevent the deterioration of brain function from becoming permanent.

Blood cannot clot as it normally does because the damaged liver can no longer synthesize enough of the proteins that help blood clot.

A few people have jaundice, itchiness, and light-colored stools. Jaundice and itchiness develop because the damaged liver cannot remove bilirubin from the blood as it normally does. Bilirubin then builds up in the blood and is deposited in the skin. Bilirubin is a yellow pigment produced as a waste product during the normal breakdown of red blood cells. Stool is light-colored because the flow of bile out of the liver is blocked and less bilirubin is eliminated in stool. Bilirubin is what gives stool its typical brown color.

Autoimmune hepatitis may cause other symptoms that involve other body systems. Symptoms can include cessation of menstrual periods, joint pain and swelling, loss of appetite, and nausea. People with autoimmune hepatitis may also have other autoimmune disorders such as type 1 diabetes mellitus, ulcerative colitis, celiac disease, or autoimmune disorders that cause anemia or inflammation of the thyroid gland or kidneys.

In many people, chronic hepatitis does not progress for years. In others, it gradually worsens. The outlook depends partly on which virus is the cause and whether treatment is available:

  • Chronic hepatitis C, if untreated, causes cirrhosis in about 20 to 30% of people. However, cirrhosis may take decades to develop. The risk of liver cancer is increased usually only if cirrhosis is present.

  • Chronic hepatitis B tends to worsen, sometimes rapidly but sometimes over decades, leading to cirrhosis. Chronic hepatitis B also increases the risk of liver cancer whether cirrhosis develops or not. (In people with liver disease caused by other conditions, liver cancer is usually a risk only if cirrhosis develops.) Rarely, chronic hepatitis B resolves on its own, without treatment.

  • Chronic coinfection with hepatitis B and D, if untreated, causes cirrhosis in up to 70%.

  • Autoimmune hepatitis can be effectively treated in most people, but some develop cirrhosis.

  • Chronic hepatitis caused by a drug often completely resolves once the drug is stopped.

Diagnosis of Chronic Hepatitis

  • Blood tests

  • Occasionally a biopsy

Doctors may suspect chronic hepatitis when

  • People have typical symptoms.

  • Blood tests (done for other reasons) detect elevated liver enzymes.

  • People have had acute hepatitis before.

Also, everyone aged 18 or over, regardless of whether symptoms are present, should be tested at least once for hepatitis C. Such testing is recommended because hepatitis C is often unrecognized.

Testing for chronic hepatitis usually begins with blood tests to measure the levels of liver enzymes and other substances produced by the liver (liver tests). These tests may help establish or exclude the diagnosis of hepatitis, identify the cause, and determine the severity of liver damage.

Blood tests are also done to help doctors identify whether a hepatitis virus is causing the infection. If no virus is identified, other blood tests are needed to check for other causes, such as autoimmune hepatitis.

A liver biopsy is sometimes done to confirm the diagnosis. The liver biopsy also enables a doctor to do the following:

  • Determine how severe the inflammation is

  • Determine whether any scarring (fibrosis) or cirrhosis has developed

  • Possibly help identify the cause of hepatitis

However, liver biopsy is being done less frequently as new technologies continue to develop. For example, tests done to determine how badly the liver is damaged and to check for other liver problems may include

Ultrasound elastography and magnetic resonance elastography use sound waves, applied to the abdomen, to determine how stiff the liver tissue is.

Screening for liver cancer

If people have chronic hepatitis B (or cirrhosis due to any liver disorder), screening for liver cancer is done every 6 months. Two tests are used:

  • Ultrasonography

  • Sometimes measurement of the level of alpha-fetoprotein in the blood

The level of alpha-fetoprotein—a protein normally produced by immature liver cells in fetuses—may be elevated when liver cancer is present.

Treatment of Chronic Hepatitis

  • Treatment of the cause (such as antiviral drugs for hepatitis B or C)

  • Treatment of complications

Treatment of chronic hepatitis focuses on treating the cause and managing the complications, such as ascites and hepatic encephalopathy, in people with cirrhosis.

If a drug is the cause, the drug is stopped. If another disorder is the cause, it is treated. If the cause is alcohol-related liver disease, doctors recommend changes in lifestyle, mainly abstinence from alcohol.

Hepatitis B and C

If chronic hepatitis B is worsening or if liver enzyme levels or viral load are high, people are usually given antiviral drugs. There is no cure for hepatitis B.

In some people, hepatitis B tends to recur once drug treatment is stopped and may be even more severe. Thus, these people may need to take an antiviral drug indefinitely.

With chronic hepatitis C, treatment with antiviral drugs is recommended for all unless their life expectancy is very short. Treatment can last from 8 to 24 weeks. Treating hepatitis C can eliminate the virus from the body and thus stop inflammation and prevent scarring and progression to cirrhosis.

Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis

Treatment of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis focuses on managing the conditions that contribute to it. For example, treatment may include

Autoimmune hepatitis

Treatment of complications

Regardless of the cause or type of chronic hepatitis, cirrhosis, liver failure, and their complications require treatment.

Treating ascites involves restricting salt consumption and taking a drug that helps the kidneys excrete more sodium and water into the urine (a diuretic).

Treating hepatic encephalopathy involves taking drugs to help the body eliminate the toxic substances that can cause the brain function to deteriorate.

Liver transplantation

Liver transplantation may be considered for people with severe liver failure.

Drugs Mentioned In This Article
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