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The Significance of Liver Enzymes
Paper I. Hepatitis C Prevalence in the Insurance Population.
By Robert L. Stout, Ph.D.
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Introduction
Laboratory testing of blood, urine and saliva samples from insurance applicants
is performed to detect illness and risk factors that raise mortality risk
sufficiently to warrant a rating or declination of a policy. Next to misrepresentation
of tobacco use, interpretation of liver enzyme elevations represents the
greatest challenge for the underwriter. The liver associated enzymes,
alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), and
gamma glutamyl peptidyl transferase (GGT) are indirect measures of liver
homeostasis (well being). While they have a relatively high concentration
in the cells of the liver, they are also present in other tissues of the
body. If the liver is damaged or the normal flow of blood or bile is obstructed,
the cellular contents leak or are secreted into the blood that bathes
the organ. One enzyme, GGT, is inducible. Increases in the concentration
of GGT may occur in response to the presence of certain drugs, even in
the absence of tissue damage. This is especially problematic, because
GGT elevations are occasionally due to minor insults such as the use of
Tylenol.
Any agent that damages the liver may cause elevations of the liver enzymes.
Obesity (fatty deposits in liver cells), over-the-counter medications,
prescription medications, alcohol, viral hepatitis, systemic or local
infection, traumatic injury, excessively high temperature in the hot tub,
hemolysis, environmental toxins of biologic or organic origin, food contaminants,
fungal or bacteria toxins and /or heavy metals may cause liver damage.
Liver enzyme elevations are often idiopathic (of unknown cause).
Liver enzymes are detected in bodily fluids using specific substrates
and their relative concentrations are reported as units per liter. The
type of enzyme(s) present is dependent on the tissue, the degree of damage
or obstruction and the type of cell injured. In general, enzyme levels
during acute hepatitis are usually extremely high, with concentrations
into the thousands. The highest enzyme levels are seen in cases of drug
induced hepatitis with concentrations into the tens of thousands. By contrast,
in chronic viral hepatitis, serum enzyme concentration may not always
reflect the degree of tissue damage and levels may vary between normal
to hundreds of units per liter. As a further complication, serum enzyme
concentration(s) may vary considerably over short periods of time reflecting
dynamic changes occurring in the liver.
Enzyme elevations may be either acute or chronic. The greatest challenge
for the underwriter is the differentiation of the serious from the benign
when reviewing applicants with high enzyme(s) levels. In the absence of
a known cause for the elevation, the case is normally classified based
on a worst-case scenario. Due to marketing pressure and the cost of re-testing
of applicants, the availability of additional tests to differentiate the
serious from the more benign becomes important.
A variable lexicon of different viruses may cause viral hepatitis. These
include both DNA and RNA viruses. Hepatitis A, E, and G cause only acute
hepatitis and pose only a short-term risk. In contrast, Hepatitis B and
Hepatitis C may cause chronic infections (1-4). Approximately 1.2 million
Americans are HBV carriers. Of greater concern is the RNA virus Hepatitis
C.
In 1985, 185,000 new cases of non-A, non-B hepatitis occurred; most were
HCV infections. With the introduction of testing for Hepatitis C in 1991,
the number of annual cases of non-A, non-B hepatitis has declined to 30,000.
Only 20- 30% of these cases are ever diagnosed. The virus, while present
in circulation, is at very low levels and is only directly detectable
by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) or a similar method. Chronic hepatitis
may develop in 85% of patients positive for Hepatitis C antibody (2-4).
Liver associated enzymes are elevated in 29%-85% of Hepatitis C antibody
positive patients (2-7). Serum enzyme levels fluctuate widely from normal
to moderately abnormal, with values rarely into the high hundreds (1,2,6).
This paper reviews the relationship between serum liver enzyme elevations
and presence of HCV antibody in the insurance applicant population.
HCV is an RNA virus that has been completely sequenced. The test for HCV
is based on detection of patient antibody to the virus. The targets for
the antibody test are both structural and non-structural proteins. A linear
schematic of the virus is shown in Diagram I. The individual boxes represent
gene sequences for the core, envelope and RNA/DNA binding nuclear proteins.
Diagram I. HCV RNA Gene Sequence:
| C |
E1 |
E2/NS1 |
NS2 |
NS3 |
NS4A |
N4B |
NS5B |
Core
Envelope Nuclear
Proteins
The two available commercial tests for detecting patient anti-HCV antibody
use a combination of three different antigens to assay for antibody to
HCV.Most laboratories will use only one or the other of these two tests.
At Clinical Reference Laboratory, applicant samples are first screened
with the Abbott Laboratories HCV EIA 2.0 (recombinantantigen c100-3, HC-31,
and HC-34) test. Reactive sera and their companion plasma are tested with
the Ortho HCV version 3.0 ELISA (recombinant antigen c22-3, c200, and
NS4) assay. Only samples reactive in both assays, and for both serum and
plasma, are reported as reactive. The use of two different tests was chosen
to reduce the number of potential false positives that would result from
the use of a single test.
Before studying the relationship between liver enzymes and HCV antibody,
it is important to determine the prevalence of the agent in the insurance
population. In a random sampling of the insurance applicants, 1.8% of
were reactive for antibody to HCV.
Table I. Hepatitis C Antibody Prevalence in the Insurance
Population and in Applicants with Elevated Liver Enzymes.
| |
Number
Tested |
Number
Positive |
Prevalence |
| General
Population |
1008 |
18 |
1.8% |
| High
Enzyme Population |
5961 |
457 |
7.7% |
By comparison, liver enzyme elevations are far more
common. In the same population, liver enzyme elevations occur in 14% of
samples. When applicants with elevated liver enzymes were tested for antibody
to HCV, 7.7% were positive (Table I). This supports the
original argument that liver enzyme elevations should help identify a
sub-group of applicants with a high probability of being HCV antibody
positive. When the pattern of enzyme elevation is studied, a distinct
pattern develops. One enzyme, ALT, is elevated far more often than the
other two (see Table II).
Of HCV antibody positive applicants, 95.4% had an elevated ALT. In comparison,
AST was elevated in the fewest number applicants but had the highest relative
percent positive with 315/2030 (15.3%).
Table II. Prevalence of the Liver Enzyme Elevations and
Hepatitis C Positivity
| |
Number
Elevated |
Positive
HCV |
Percent
of Positives |
| ALT |
5082
(85.2%) |
436
(8.6%) |
95.4% |
| AST |
2030
(34.0%) |
315
(15.%) |
68.9% |
| GGT |
2967
(49.8%) |
240
(8.0%) |
52.5% |
| Total |
5961 |
457
(7.7%) |
100% |
Note: The sum in each column is greater
than the actual total due to double counting of samples that are positive
for more than a single enzyme.
In this population 56.7% of HCV antibody positive applicants have an ALT
elevation of less than two times the upper level of normal. If GGT is
chosen as the primary reflex marker 59.3% of HCV positive samples have
an enzyme elevation of less than 2 times the upper level of normal. However,
the percent of positive samples drops to 43% if all three enzymes have
elevations of less than 2 times the upper limit of normal. With almost
half of the HCV positive population having an enzyme elevation of less
than two times the upper level of normal, any elevation should be tested
for antibody to HCV.
HCV antibodies are present in 1.8% of a random group of insurance applicants.
As such, HCV represents the most prevalent, serious infectious agent in
this population. The specificity of the third generation test is reported
to be 99.9%. This would mean that 1 applicant per 1000 would be a false
positive. With a prevalence of 18 cases per 1000, 1 additional positive
would cause 1/19 (5%) false positives. The use of two separate screening
tests, Abbott and ORTHOTM, with similar specificity reduces the error
to less than 0.25%. While this is infrequent, there will be some applicants
that are not confirmed positive by HCV PCR testing. Unfortunately, a single
negative HCV PCR does not prove that the applicant is not viremic. The
sensitivity of the PCR test is 95% in-patients with liver enzyme elevations.
Therefore, initially reactive applicants that are PCR HCV RNA negative
should be assayed again in 3-6 months. If the applicant is negative on
two separate occasions, they should be considered as false positive by
the antibody test.
HCV represents a major identifiable risk for insurance carriers. The mortality
ratio for HCV infected patients is approximately 250% to 315% as compared
to the general population (8,9). While the infection may be asymptomatic
for 10 to 20 years, progressive changes are occurring in the liver. Seventy
(70%) to eighty-five percent (85%) of HCV positive patients develop chronic
hepatitis (1,2, 6). For the HCV positive applicant, the most prudent approach
may be a very careful evaluation of the risk.
The general public health risk due to HCV infection has recently been
reviewed by a NIH expert panel (10). The group was convened to determine
treatment and public health recommendations. In summary, 8,000-10,000
Americans die per year from HCV. With no effective treatment and a large
pool of infected, but symptom-free individuals, that number is expected
to triple during the next two decades. Interferon therapy is effective
in only 10-20% of patients (11). The number of patients classified as
sustained responders may increase to 20-30% if the treatment period is
extended to 12 months. The severity of liver damage does not correlate
with either the level of enzyme elevation or the amount of HCV RNA present
in serum (blood) (12). While there is a tendency for the poorest prognosis
to be associated with highest HCV RNA levels, the correlation is not absolute.
In some patients with a low number of viral particles present in blood,
biopsy proven cirrhosis was present. In addition, the correlation between
HCV positivity and the level of enzyme elevation is weak. In many patients,
enzyme levels will fluctuate between normal and slightly abnormal.
Underwriting
- For
insurance applicants, when ALT is elevated, the risk of being HCV
positive is 8.6%.
- If ALT,
GGT and AST are high, the risk exceeds 16%.
- 43%
of HCV antibody positive applicants have liver enzyme elevations of
less than 2 times the upper level of normal.
- There
is no clear relationship between the degree of enzyme elevation and
the extent of liver disease.
- HCV
hepatitis may be a symptom-free illness for 15 to 20 years. In retrospect,
for 50% of cases no apparent cause for the infection can be identified.
- The
expected excess mortality is 250-315%.
- The
specificity of the double assay test is greater than 99.9%.
- Most
HCV positive applicants are unaware that they are infected.
The above data suggests that all applicants with elevated
liver enzymes should be evaluated for HCV. Consult with your laboratory
about the best selection criteria for your population.
Acknowledgments: The author gratefully acknowledges Robert Palmer, M.D.
and Michael Fulks, M.D. for their constructive comments on this research.
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