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Case Report

Hepatitis C Virus Infection with and without Cryoglobulinemia as a Case of Churg-Strauss Syndrome

PATRICK MERCIÉ, JEAN-FRANÇOIS VIALLARD, ISABELLE FAURE, PASCALE TRIMOULET, ANNE VITAL, FRANÇOIS LIFERMANN, BERNARD LENG and JEAN-LUC PELLEGRIN

ABSTRACT.

Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection may be associated with numerous immune disorders, with vasculitis including polyarteritis nodosa, or with both. Cryoglobulinemia, which is often present, can also be expressed by vasculitis. We describe 2 cases of Churg-Strauss syndrome (CSS) in patients with HCV infection. We found no previous case of CSS accompanying HCV infection in the literature. The current patients were women aged 40 and 66 years. In both cases, a clinical and laboratory pattern suggesting CSS was found before the HCV infection was discovered. One patient had cryoglobulinemia. One patient was successfully treated with interferon (IFN). The other was treated for 18 months with IFN and corticosteroids. Second-line therapy consisting of IFN with ribavirin was successful. The emergence of HCV infection may have led to an induced form of CSS. The relationship among HCV, cryoglobulinemia, and CSS is not clear, but may be similar to that existing between polyarteritis nodosa and hepatitis B virus. These observations suggest that IFN-a therapy may be effective against CSS in HCV infected patients with or without cryoglobulinemia. (J Rheumatol 2000;27:814-7)

Key Indexing Terms:

CHURG-STRAUSS SYNDROME
VASCULITIS
HEPATITIS C VIRUS
INTERFERON THERAPY

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