Shortly after HCV enters your body, it causes the cells in your liver to become inflamed. This is the acute phase of hepatitis C. If liver inflammation lasts longer than 6 months, as it does in most cases, the disease has entered the long-term, or chronic phase.1,2
Some people develop flulike symptoms or even jaundice (yellow eyes and skin, dark-colored urine, light-colored stools) during the acute stage of HCV infection; however, most people have no symptoms and are not aware that they are infected with HCV.1 The infection is often diagnosed when a person’s blood is tested for donation or another reason.1
If you have chronic hepatitis C, it is important that you visit your doctor regularly so the health of your liver can be monitored. The ongoing inflammation caused by chronic hepatitis C may damage liver tissue, and when the damaged tissue dies it is replaced with scar tissue. This process is called fibrosis.
The development of liver fibrosis is usually a slow process that does not cause symptoms. However, unless its progress is stopped, fibrosis can lead to cirrhosis, which is scar tissue buildup so severe that it changes the structure of the liver and may eventually cause liver failure. Among people who have chronic hepatitis C, 5% to 20% are reported to develop cirrhosis over a period of 20 to 30 years.1 Hepatitis C-caused liver failure is one of the main reasons people in the United States need liver transplants.1,2 In addition, about 1% to 5% of people who have chronic hepatitis C will die from cirrhosis or liver cancer.1