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Case Reports
. 2006 Aug 14;12(30):4908-10.
doi: 10.3748/wjg.v12.i30.4908.

Retinal vein thrombosis associated with pegylated-interferon and ribavirin combination therapy for chronic hepatitis C

Affiliations
Case Reports

Retinal vein thrombosis associated with pegylated-interferon and ribavirin combination therapy for chronic hepatitis C

Iman Zandieh et al. World J Gastroenterol. .

Abstract

An estimated 300 million people worldwide suffer from chronic hepatitis C with a prevalence of 0.8%-1.0% of the general population in Canada. An increasing pool of evidence exists supporting the use of pegylated- interferon (pegIFN) and ribavirin combination therapy for hepatitis C. We report a 49-year old male of North American aboriginal descent with chronic hepatitis C (genotype 2b). Biopsy confirmed that he had cirrhosis with a 2-wk history of left eye pain and decreased visual acuity. He developed retinal vein thrombosis after 16 of 24 wk of pegIFN-alpha 2a and ribavirin combination therapy. He was urgently referred to a retinal specialist and diagnosed with non-ischemic central retinal vein occlusion of the left eye. PegIFN and ribavirin combination therapy was discontinued and HCV RNA was undetectable after 16 wk of treatment. Hematologic investigations revealed that the patient was a factor V Leiden heterozygote with mildly decreased protein C activity. Our patient had a number of hypercoagulable risk factors, including factor V Leiden heterozygosity, cirrhosis, and hepatitis C that alone would have most likely remained clinically silent. We speculate that in the setting of pegIFN treatment, these risk factors may coalesce and cause the retinal vein thrombosis.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Normal fundus in the right eye (A) and marked venous tortuosity and scattered retinal hemorrhages in the left eye (B).
Figure 2
Figure 2
Left eye angiogram. A: Early phase image revealing delayed venous filling; B: Late phase image revealing leakage of fluorescein in the macula.

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