Background and Aim Ongoing migratory flows are reconstituting the hepatitis D virus (HDV) reservoir in Italy. We aimed to characterise the current clinical and virologic features of HDV infection in both native Italians and migrants. Methods We enrolled 515 hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)-positive patients with detectable anti-HDV antibodies from 32 Italian centres between August 2022 and July 2024; all patients underwent centralised virologic assessment. Results Overall, 432 out of 515 (83.9%) patients were HDV-RNA-positive (4.39, 1.30–5.82 Log IU/mL; 99.0% HDV genotype-1). HDV-RNA levels correlated with ALT (rs = 0575, 0.514–0.630) and hepatitis B core-related antigen (rs = 0.521, 0.455–0.581). Native Italians (n = 317; 61.6%) were older than migrants (n = 198; 38.4%) (median age: 60, 55–65 vs. 46, 39–54 years; p < 0.001) and were more frequently male (68.1% vs. 49.5%; p < 0.001), with a higher prevalence of liver cirrhosis (70.3% vs. 50.5%; p < 0.001) and hepatocellular carcinoma (14.8% vs. 0.5%; p < 0.001). Among Italians, 223 (70.3%) had liver cirrhosis, 46 (14.5%) had chronic hepatitis D (CHD) without cirrhosis and 48 (15.1%) exhibited inactive/minimal disease with low viremia (≤ 3 Log IU/mL). Among migrants, 100 (50.5%) had liver cirrhosis, 58 (29.3%) had CHD and 40 (20.2%) showed inactive/minimal disease with low viremia (≤ 3 Log IU/mL). Conclusions The current clinical landscape of chronic HDV infections in Italy is heterogeneous, changing the perspective of CHD as uniformly severe; although cirrhosis remains common, a substantial proportion of both native Italians and migrants present with milder forms of disease.
The Medical Impact of Hepatitis D Virus Infection in Natives and Immigrants: The Italian Paradigm / G. Caviglia, E. Dileo, A. Olivero, G. Mengozzi, A. Ciancio, A. Loglio, M. Viganò, S. Fagiuoli, P. Colombatto, B. Coco, M. Brunetto, D. Angrisani, A. Galeota Lanza, C. Magni, G. Rizzardini, V. Messina, M. Milella, A. Saracino, L. Marinaro, G. Cariti, V. Cossiga, F. Morisco, S. Cretella, G. Verucchi, E. Biliotti, G. D'Offizi, M. Feasi, E. Pontali, C. Coppola, R. Rapetti, M. Pirisi, A. Izzi, T. Santantonio, V. Di Marco, A. Marrone, N. Coppola, M. Rizzi, A. Cattelan, G. Niro, P. Toniutto, F. Ponziani, L. Belli, A. Federico, G. Bertino, M. Barone, M. Puoti, A. Civolani, M. Distefano, L. Surace, R. Cozzolongo, E. Cela, E. Teti, P. Lampertico, T. Stroffolini, M. Rizzetto. - In: LIVER INTERNATIONAL. - ISSN 1478-3223. - 45:9(2025 Sep), pp. 1-11. [10.1111/liv.70242]
The Medical Impact of Hepatitis D Virus Infection in Natives and Immigrants: The Italian Paradigm
A. Loglio;M. Viganò;C. Magni;V. Di Marco;A. Marrone;M. Barone;M. Distefano;P. Lampertico;
2025
Abstract
Background and Aim Ongoing migratory flows are reconstituting the hepatitis D virus (HDV) reservoir in Italy. We aimed to characterise the current clinical and virologic features of HDV infection in both native Italians and migrants. Methods We enrolled 515 hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)-positive patients with detectable anti-HDV antibodies from 32 Italian centres between August 2022 and July 2024; all patients underwent centralised virologic assessment. Results Overall, 432 out of 515 (83.9%) patients were HDV-RNA-positive (4.39, 1.30–5.82 Log IU/mL; 99.0% HDV genotype-1). HDV-RNA levels correlated with ALT (rs = 0575, 0.514–0.630) and hepatitis B core-related antigen (rs = 0.521, 0.455–0.581). Native Italians (n = 317; 61.6%) were older than migrants (n = 198; 38.4%) (median age: 60, 55–65 vs. 46, 39–54 years; p < 0.001) and were more frequently male (68.1% vs. 49.5%; p < 0.001), with a higher prevalence of liver cirrhosis (70.3% vs. 50.5%; p < 0.001) and hepatocellular carcinoma (14.8% vs. 0.5%; p < 0.001). Among Italians, 223 (70.3%) had liver cirrhosis, 46 (14.5%) had chronic hepatitis D (CHD) without cirrhosis and 48 (15.1%) exhibited inactive/minimal disease with low viremia (≤ 3 Log IU/mL). Among migrants, 100 (50.5%) had liver cirrhosis, 58 (29.3%) had CHD and 40 (20.2%) showed inactive/minimal disease with low viremia (≤ 3 Log IU/mL). Conclusions The current clinical landscape of chronic HDV infections in Italy is heterogeneous, changing the perspective of CHD as uniformly severe; although cirrhosis remains common, a substantial proportion of both native Italians and migrants present with milder forms of disease.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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