All the news Showing 10 of 11 articles from: AlcoholGet an RSS feed of these articles Show All news infohep newsEditors' picks from other sources People with diabetes or high alcohol consumption at higher risk of late hepatitis C diagnosis Keith Alcorn / 24 September 2021 People with diabetes and those with hazardous alcohol intake were significantly more likely to remain undiagnosed with hepatitis C and present with advanced fibrosis, a large number of people diagnosed with hepatitis ... Alcoholic liver disease replaces hepatitis C infection as the leading cause of liver transplantation in patients without hepatocellular carcinoma in the USA Eurekalert Medicine & Health / 11 April 2018 HCV and Alcoholism: How Two Diseases and Their Treatments Go Hand-In-Hand Healio / 22 November 2016 People with HCV attaining SVR continue to have increased mortality risk but this is due to alcohol and drug use Michael Carter / 03 October 2016 Mortality rates among people with hepatitis C virus (HCV) who attain a sustained virological response after HCV treatment are approximately twice as high as those expected in the general population, Scottish investigators report ... Fighting the War on HCV Within the Veterans Health Administration System HCV Next / 21 June 2016 Primrose Healthcare Launches an Innovative Alcohol App to Help Hepatitis C Patients Overcome Alcohol Addiction Business Wire (press release) / 24 May 2016 Hepatitis C Virus Infection and Alcohol: Challenges and Opportunities HCV Action / 24 June 2015 If I'm Cured of Hepatitis C, When Is It Safe to Drink Again? Healthline / 19 May 2015 Alcohol misuse the strongest predictor of severe liver damage and death in French people with hepatitis C Keith Alcorn / 28 April 2015 People with hepatitis C have a much greater risk of liver-related hospitalisation or death if they have an alcohol use disorder or another serious co-morbidity such as HIV infection, chronic kidney disease ... Even moderate drinking increases risk of advanced liver fibrosis for people with HIV and HCV co-infection Michael Carter / 28 May 2014 Even moderate alcohol consumption is associated with an increased risk of advanced liver fibrosis for people living with HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV) co-infection, investigators from the United States report in Clinical ... ← First12Next → Other pages in this section Latest news All the news Hepatitis A Hepatitis B Hepatitis C Hepatitis D Hepatitis E Coronavirus NAFLD Treatment for hepatocellular carcinoma Transmission, epidemiology and prevention Health services, policy and advocacy Social issues Conference news Email bulletin archive