Timeline of hepatitis

This is a Timeline of hepatitis, describing major events such as epidemics and medical developments, related to hepatitis A, B, C, D and E.

Year/periodKey developments
5th century BCHepatitis already plagues mankind.[1]
17th-19th centuryJaundice epidemics break out in military and civilian populations during wars.[2]
20th centuryIt is first recognized that viruses introduced by fecally contaminated food and water are responsible for hepatitis infection.[3] Multiple scientific developments from the second half of the century establish the current basis of knowledge and treatment of the H viruses.
1960s–1970sSeveral important milestones in the history of viral hepatitis happen in the 1960s.[4] The hepatitis c virus is identified. Blood tests to detect the hepatitis A and B infection are developed.[5] Modern viral hepatitis research begins with the discovery of Australia antigen.[4]
1980sHepatitis B vaccine starts implementation worldwide.[6]
1990s–2000sThe first Interferon alfa is approved for the treatment for hepatitis C.[7] Multiple drugs are developed for combating hepatitis. The World Hepatitis Alliance is founded.[7]
Recent yearsThere isn’t a vaccine for hepatitis C virus at this time.[8] About 375 million people are infected with the hepatitis B virus. HBV has killed more people than AIDS and is the cause of millions of cases of liver cancer.[9] Most cases of HB are found in the Asia-Pacific region.[6] In 2009, it was estimated that about 1.4 million cases of hepatitis A occurred worldwide.[10] Hepatitis E primarily occurs in South Asia and Africa.[3]

Full timeline

Year/periodType of eventEventGeographical location
400 BCMedical developmentThe earliest description of epidemic hepatitis, which may or may not have been due to hepatitis B virus, is credited to Greek physician Hippocrates, who describes a condition he called “epidemic jaundice”.[14][8]Greece
741–752Medical developmentPope Zachary quarantines individuals with jaundice to prevent its spread throughout Rome, suggesting an apparent infectious nature of this clinical finding.[4]
1861–1865EpidemicLarge hepatitis epidemic is documented during the American Civil War. 52,000 cases are estimated.[15][14]United States
1870EpidemicLarge hepatitis epidemic breaks out during the Franco–Prussian War.[14]
1865Scientific developmentGerman physician Rudolf Virchow describes a patient with symptoms of epidemic jaundice in whom the lower end of the common bile duct was blocked with a plug of mucus. This would lead to the term “catarrhal jaundice,” because the disease is believed to be caused by catarrh as a result of mucus obstructing the bile duct.[4]
1885Scientific developmentA. Lurman first describes an epidemic of serum hepatitis among 191 German ship workers in Bremen after a smallpox vaccination campaign using human lymph. It is the earliest record of an epidemic caused by hepatitis B virus.[6][14][4]Germany
1908Scientific developmentS. McDonald publishes the hypothesis that the infectious jaundice is caused by a virus.[2][4]
1912Medical developmentThe name Hepatitis is first implemented.[3]
1914–1918EpidemicHepatitis epidemic breaks out during World War I.[14]
1942–1945EpidemicApproximately 182,383 service members are hospitalized for Hepatitis C during World War II. The disease is contracted in two different ways. An epidemic of hepatitis breaks out among many service members who were vaccinated against yellow fever. The source of the infection is traced to the serum, or clear fluid in the blood, that is used in the vaccine. This form of the disease becomes known as serum hepatitis. A different form of hepatitis, acute hepatitis, is found among soldiers who have received blood transfusions.[8]Europe
1947Scientific developmentMacCallum classifies viral hepatitis into two types. Viral hepatitis B is classified as serum hepatitis.[4]
1951Scientific developmentResearchers describe a form of chronic hepatitis occurring primarily in young women. Because nearly 15% of these patients have positive lupus erithematosus cell tests, this disorder is first called lupoid hepatitis. By the 1970s its autoimmune origine would be discovered, and today the condition is referred as autoimmune hepatitis.[3]
1953Medical developmentHepatitis becomes a reportable disease.[3]
1957Scientific developmentScientists find that interferon could act as an antiviral drug. The name interferon is given since it could “interfere” with replication or multiplication of the virus.[5]
1963Scientific developmentBlood test to detect hepatitis B infection is developed.[5]
1963–1965Scientific developmentThe hepatitis B virus surface antigen HBsAg (also known as Australia antigen) is first identified.[4][14]
1967Scientific developmentAmerican geneticist Baruch Samuel Blumberg and colleagues, while researching genetic links to disease susceptibility, discover the hepatitis B virus. In 1976, Dr. Blumberg would be awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine for this discovery.[8][16]
1967Scientific developmentKrugman and colleagues recognize the parenterally transmitted nature of hepatitis B, which would lead to the formulation of hygienic measures to prevent the disease.[14]
1968Scientific developmentPrince, Murakami, and Okochi, through independent studies, confirm that the Australia antigen is found specifically in patients who had serum hepatitis (hepatitis B).[4]
1969Medical developmentAmerican physician Baruch Samuel Blumberg and colleagues develop the blood test that is used to detect the hepatitis B virus, and develop the first hepatitis B vaccine.[16]
1970Scientific developmentDS Dane first describes the 42–47 nm double shelled particles (today called Dane particles) as the actual infectious particles, produced by the hepatitis B virus.[14][4]
1973Scientific developmentAmerican researchers Stephen Feinstone, Albert Kapikian and Robert Purcell, working at the National Institutes of Health, identify the virus responsible for hepatitis A. The virus is discovered in fecal samples from prisoner volunteers.[8]United States
1973Scientific developmentBlood test to detect hepatitis A infection is developed.[5]
1975Scientific developmentAmerican and British researchers identify a type of hepatitis that doesn’t test positive for the proteins found with hepatitis A virus or hepatitis B virus. Both teams conclude that a previously unrecognized human hepatitis virus is the likely cause.[8]
1977Scientific developmentRizzetto and coworkers discover the Hepatitis D virus, while trying to find out why some petients with hepatitis B virus infection have more serious disease than others.[17]
1978Scientific developmentSoviet scientist Mikhail Balayan, investigating an outbreak of non-A, non-B hepatitis in Tashkent, discovers the hepatitis E virus, by transmitting the disease into himself by oral administration of pooled stool extracts of 9 patients with non-A and non-B hepatitis.[18][19]Uzbekistan
1981Medical developmentAmerican microbiologist Maurice Hilleman develops the first effective vaccine for Hepatitis A virus.[8]United States
1982Medical developmentVaccine against hepatitis B becomes available. The vaccine is 95% effective in preventing infection and the development of chronic disease and liver cancer due to hepatitis B.[20]
1989Scientific developmentThe Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Chiron Corporation working together identify the hepatitis C virus.[8] It is the first virus identified by a direct molecular approach.[15][7]United States
1990–1992Medical developmentScreening the blood supply for hepatitis C virus begins in the United States. In 1992, a more sensitive test becomes available, thus eliminating the risk from known genotypes of HCV.[8]United States
1991Medical developmentThe United States Food and Drug Administration approves Interferon alfa-2b (Intron A), for the treatment of hepatitis C virus.[8]United States
1991PolicyEgypt introduces childhood immunization against hepatitis B virus.[6]Egypt
1992Vaccination of infants against hepatitis B reaches coverage in 31 WHO Member States as part of their vaccination schedules.[20]
1992Medical developmentA blood test is developed to effectively screen blood before it is transfused. This would rediuce the risk of hepatitis C through a blood transfusion to approximately 0.01%.[5]
1992Medical developmentUnited States Food and Drug Administration approves lamivudine to treat hepatitis B.[4]United States
1994PolicyHepatitis B vaccine becomes part of the routine childhood immunization schedule in the United States.[21]United States
1995Medical developmentHepatitis A vaccine becomes available on the market.[13][22]
1996EpidemicThe Egyptian Ministry of Health estimates that 15 to 20 percent of Egyptians are infected with hepatitis c virus. Similar to the experience of many countries including Italy, the epidemic is linked to a nationwide vaccination campaign, during which needles were re-used. Egypt continues to report the highest hepatitis C rate in the world.[7]Egypt
1996Medical developmentThe United States Food and Drug Administration approves alfa interferon (Roche- Roferon A) to treat hepatitis C.[5]United States
1997Medical developmentThe United States Food and Drug Administration approves consensus interferon (Amgen-now InterMune-Infergen) to treat hepatitis C.[5]United States
1998Medical developmentThe United States Food and Drug Administration approves combination of Interferon and anti-viral drug Ribavirin (Schering’s Intron A plus ribavirin) for hepatitis C virus therapy. The combination is most effective in preventing HCV relapse rather than as an anti-viral agent.[8][5]United States
2001Medical developmentUnited States Food and Drug Administration approves both pegylated interferon and the combination of pegylated interferon with ribavirin for hepatitis C virus therapy.[8][7]United States
2005Medical developmentUnited States Food and Drug Administration approves entecavir to treat hepatitis B.[4]United States
2006Medical developmentUnited States Food and Drug Administration approves telbivudine to treat hepatitis B.[4]United States
2006Medical developmentPrison needle exchange programs are established or piloted in a number of countries around the world, including Switzerland, Germany, Spain, Moldova, the Kyrgyzstan, Armenia and Iran (NEP is based on the philosophy of harm reduction that attempts to reduce the risk factors for diseases such as HIV/AIDS and hepatitis.[7]Switzerland, Germany, Spain, Moldova, the Kyrgyzstan, Armenia, Iran
2007OrganizationThe World Hepatitis Alliance is founded.[7]
2008CampaignThe World Hepatitis Alliance launches the first World Hepatitis Day on May 19, with a campaign called Am I Number 12?, referring to the statistic that, worldwide, one in every 12 people is living with a form of viral hepatitis.[7]
2010Medical developmentUnited States Food and Drug Administration approves rapid antibody test OraQuick for hepatitis C virus detection. This test gives results in 20 minutes.[8]United States
2010The Sixty-third World Health Assembly of the World Health Organization passes a viral hepatitis resolution, recognizing, among other points, “the need to reduce incidence to prevent and control viral hepatitis, to increase access to correct diagnosis and to provide appropriate treatment programmes in all regions. In the same year, the WHO endorses July 28th as World Hepatitis Day, making it the fourth official global health awareness day, alongside HIV, malaria and tuberculosis.”[7]
2011Medical developmentA recombinant hepatitis E vaccine is licensed in China, for use in people ages 16–65 years old.[21]People's Republic of China
2011Program launchIn response to the Resolution on Viral Hepatitis, the World Health Organization establishes a Global Hepatitis Program.[7]
2011Medical developmentUnited States Food and Drug Administration approves new oral agents boceprevir and telaprevir for the treatment of hepatitis C, in combination with pegylated interferon and ribavirin. These new, triple-therapy regimens would cure rates as high as 70 to 75 percent. Therapy would last from 24 to 48 weeks.[23]United States
2012Medical developmentUnited States Food and Drug Administration approves tenofobir to treat hepatitis B.[4]United States
2013Medical developmentUnited States Food and Drug Administration approves sofosbuvir (sold under the brand name Sovaldi) and simeprevir (sold under the brand name Olysio) for the treatment for hepatitis C virus therapy.[8]United States
2014Vaccination of infants against hepatitis B reaches coverage in 184 WHO Member States as part of their vaccination schedules and 82% of children in these states receive the hepatitis B vaccine.[20]
2015PublicationThe World Health Organization launches its first Guidelines for the prevention, care and treatment of persons living with chronic hepatitis B infection. The recommendations:
  • Promote the use of simple, non-invasive diagnostic tests to assess the stage of liver disease and eligibility for treatment.
  • Prioritize treatment for those with most advanced liver disease and at greatest risk of mortality.
  • Recommend the preferred use of the nucleotide analogues with a high barrier to drug resistance (tenofovir and entecavir, and entecavir in children aged between 2–11 years) for first- and second-line treatment.[20]
2015Scientific developmentA Canadian paper describes using a mouse model of chronic hepatitis B infection and shows that interfering with certain proteins can facilitate clearance of the virus, which may have implications for human disease.[24]Canada
2016Medical developmentThe United States government recruits participants for the phase IV trial of the drug Hecolin, for the treatment of hepatitis E.[25]United States

See also

References

  1. "Viral Hepatitis B: Introduction" (PDF). hopkinsmedicine.org. Retrieved 27 February 2017.
  2. "The History of Hepatitis". stanford.edu. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
  3. Moore, Elaine A. (2006-08-21). Hepatitis: Causes, Treatments and Resources. ISBN 9780786426232. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
  4. Thomas, Emmanuel; Yoneda, Masato; Schiff, Eugene R. (2015). "Viral Hepatitis: Past and Future of HBV and HDV". Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Medicine. 5 (2): a021345. doi:10.1101/cshperspect.a021345. PMC 4315911. PMID 25646383.
  5. Mandal, Ananya (2010-02-18). "Hepatitis C History". news-medical.net. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
  6. Burns, Gregory S.; Thompson, Alexander J. (2014). "Viral Hepatitis B: Clinical and Epidemiological Characteristics". Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Medicine. 4 (12): a024935. doi:10.1101/cshperspect.a024935. PMC 4292086. PMID 25359547.
  7. "A brief history of hepatitis C: 1989 - 2016". catie.ca. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
  8. York Morris, Susan (2016-02-03). "The History of Hepatitis C: A Timeline". healthline.com. Retrieved 7 February 2017.
  9. "Hepatitis B: The Hunt for a Killer Virus". princeton.edu. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  10. MATHENY, SAMUEL C. (December 2012). "Hepatitis A". American Family Physician. 86 (11): 1027–1034. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
  11. "WHO-UNICEF estimates of HepB_BD coverage". WHO. Retrieved 27 February 2017.
  12. "Historical reported cases and estimates". cdc.gov. Retrieved 27 February 2017.
  13. Wang, Zhifang; Yaping, Chen; Shuyun, Xie; Huakun, Lv (2016). "Changing Epidemiological Characteristics of Hepatitis A in Zhejiang Province, China: Increased Susceptibility in Adults". PLOS ONE. 11 (4): e0153804. Bibcode:2016PLoSO..1153804W. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0153804. PMC 4836706. PMID 27093614.
  14. Datta, Sibnarayan; Chatterjee, Soumya; Veer, Vijay; Chakravarty, Runu (2012). "Molecular Biology of the Hepatitis B Virus for Clinicians". Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hepatology. 2 (4): 353–365. doi:10.1016/j.jceh.2012.10.003. PMC 3940099. PMID 25755457.
  15. Christian Trepo (2014). "A brief history of hepatitis milestones". Liver International. 34: 29–37. doi:10.1111/liv.12409. PMID 24373076.
  16. "Baruch Blumberg, MD, DPhil". hepb.org. Retrieved 8 February 2017.
  17. Hsieh, Ting-Hui; Liu, Chun-Jen; Chen, Ding-Shinn; Chen, Pei-Jer (2006). "Natural Course and Treatment of Hepatitis D Virus Infection". Journal of the Formosan Medical Association. 105 (11): 869–881. doi:10.1016/S0929-6646(09)60172-8. PMID 17098688.
  18. Khuroo, MS (2011). "Discovery of hepatitis E: the epidemic non-A, non-B hepatitis 30 years down the memory lane". Virus Research. 161 (1): 3–14. doi:10.1016/j.virusres.2011.02.007. PMID 21320558.
  19. Arbeitskreis Blut, Untergruppe "Bewertung Blutassoziierter Krankheitserreger" (2009). "Hepatitis E Virus". Transfusion Medicine and Hemotherapy. 36 (1): 40–47. doi:10.1159/000197321. PMC 2928833. PMID 21048820.
  20. "Hepatitis B fact sheet". who.int. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  21. "Hepatitis A and Hepatitis B". historyofvaccines.org. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  22. Wilson, Christopher B.; Nizet, Victor; Maldonado, Yvonne; Remington, Jack S.; Klein, Jerome O. (2014-12-24). Remington and Klein's Infectious Diseases of the Fetus and Newborn. ISBN 9780323340960. Retrieved 25 February 2017.
  23. "Hepatitis C: A 21st Century Success Story (Op-Ed)". livescience.com. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
  24. Ebert, Gregor; Preston, Simon; Allison, Cody; Cooney, James; Toe, Jesse G.; Stutz, Michael D.; Ojaimi, Samar; Scott, Hamish W.; Baschuk, Nikola (2015-05-05). "Cellular inhibitor of apoptosis proteins prevent clearance of hepatitis B virus". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 112 (18): 5797–5802. Bibcode:2015PNAS..112.5797E. doi:10.1073/pnas.1502390112. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 4426461. PMID 25902529.
  25. "Phase Ⅳ Clinical Trial of Recombinant Hepatitis E Vaccine(Hecolin®) - Full Text View - ClinicalTrials.gov". clinicaltrials.gov. Retrieved 27 February 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.