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Hepatitis E Virus

HEV is considered a zoonotic disease with reservoirs in pigs, wild boar, and deer. Transmission is fecal-oral, similar to HAV, and HEV can occur in outbreaks. Acute hepatitis E is clinically indistinguishable from other types of acute viral hepatitis and is usually self-limited, with the exception of cases during pregnancy (mortality can be as high as 10%-30% in the third trimester), preexisting chronic liver disease, and organ transplantation.

Hepatitis E can rarely progress to chronic infection (HEV RNA for gt;6 months). Most chronic cases have occurred in solid organ transplant recipients or immunosuppressed individuals. In a retrospective multicenter study of 59 transplant recipients with chronic hepatitis E, ribavirin monotherapy for 3 months achieved an SVR of 78%.5

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Source: Ancha S., Auberle C., Cash D., Harsh M., Hickman J., Kounga C.. The Washington Manual of Medical Therapeutics, 37th edition, LWW, 2022. —1250p.. 1250
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