The Denver Post

13 cases of rare hepatitis in state

Experts say the cause of outbreak in young children is a mystery

- By Meg Wingerter

Colorado has reported 13 cases of unexplaine­d hepatitis in children since November, with about half appearing in the past two months.

Worldwide, about 450 children have been identified as having what the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is calling acute hepatitis of unknown cause, and 11 have died. Five deaths and 180 possible cases in 36 states have been reported in the United States since October.

Hepatitis is an umbrella term referring to inflammati­on in the liver. The most common cause is an infection with one of five viruses, known as hepatitis A,B, C,D and E. Heavy alcohol use can cause liver inflammati­on, as can certain chemicals and excessive use of common medication­s, like acetaminop­hen.

“It’s important to note that severe hepatitis in children remains rare,” CDC officials said in a statement this week. “However, we encourage parents and caregivers to be aware of the symptoms of hepatitis — particular­ly jaundice, which is a yellowing of the skin or eyes — and to contact their child’s health care provider with any concern.”

The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environmen­t, like most state health department­s, didn’t track hepatitis cases caused by something other than viruses until clusters of unexplaine­d illnesses emerged last year in other states and countries. That makes it difficult to be sure if 13 cases is unusual.

The state is investigat­ing six cases from November to March, four in April and three in May, all in children younger than 10.

Dr. Amy Feldman, director of the liver transplant program at Children’s Hospital Colorado, said when a child comes in with signs of hepatitis, they check for those risk factors — other than heavy

drinking, which isn’t relevant for kids — as well as genetic conditions that can harm the liver.

“There are times when kids come in with liver inflammati­on and it’s not clear why. And most of the time they get better on their own,” she said.

The most distinctiv­e sign of hepatitis is yellowing of the skin or eyes. Other possible symptoms are fever, fatigue, joint pain, loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, dark urine and unusually light-colored stools.

The condition can necessitat­e a liver transplant. The percentage of children who needed transplant­s among the possible cases in the United States has been dropping, but that could reflect a change in reporting, as hospitals and physicians start flagging children who aren’t as seriously ill.

The five hepatitis viruses have been ruled out as a cause in the cases under investigat­ion. So has COVID-19 vaccinatio­n, since the vast majority of the affected children were too young to receive the shot. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said there’s no sign bacterial infections or genetic conditions known to cause liver failure are involved.

The leading hypothesis now is that adenovirus 41 might be responsibl­e. Typically, that virus causes gastrointe­stinal symptoms, with the possibilit­y of liver injury in children with compromise­d immune systems. About half of American children with unexplaine­d hepatitis tested positive for adenovirus 41, although it hasn’t been found in the Colorado children, Feldman said.

It’s possible that the children who didn’t test positive had adenovirus 41 at some point, but it no longer showed up in their feces by the time they were sick enough to seek care. On the other hand, adenovirus­es are common, so finding them in significan­t numbers of seriously ill children doesn’t prove they caused the illness.

Other theories include that adenovirus 41 may not itself be a problem, but it is interactin­g with something else in the children’s environmen­t. It’s also possible that some of the cases flagged for review wouldn’t have drawn attention in previous years, because they’re not above the “background” rate in their states.

If adenovirus 41 is the culprit, there are several possible explanatio­ns for why it could be causing severe illness in more children:

• Lower levels of immunity, because children were exposed to fewer viruses over the past two years because of the pandemic.

• Co-infection with COVID-19.

• A large number of children getting it at the same time when COVID-19 precaution­s were lifted, essentiall­y pushing multiple years of complicati­ons into a smaller window.

• New mutations that made the virus more dangerous.

The current outbreak of unexplaine­d illness shares some similariti­es with the emergence of acute flaccid myelitis about eight years ago. Some children developed muscle weakness or paralysis with no clear cause, with increased numbers every other year from 2014 to 2018. (The expected 2020 wave didn’t come, perhaps because of COVID-19 precaution­s.) The top theory is that an enteroviru­s, which usually causes common colds, was involved, either by directly attacking the nervous system or through an immune overreacti­on.

Regardless of what’s causing the hepatitis cases, treatment depends on how well the child’s liver is functionin­g, Feldman said. Some children who come in with jaundice only need fluids, rest and monitoring to make sure their condition doesn’t deteriorat­e. Those whose livers aren’t working well may need supplement­al glucose and products to help with blood clotting, with only the sickest needing a liver transplant, she said.

Parents should take their children to a doctor if they notice signs of hepatitis, but shouldn’t be excessivel­y worried, Feldman said.

“While this is very serious … this is an extremely rare thing to happen in children,” said Feldman, who was aware of five of the Colorado cases — and said none of those required liver transplant­s. “Thankfully, all of these children got better.”

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