Impact of common risk factors of fibrosis progression in chronic hepatitis C.


Autoria(s): Rüeger S.; Bochud P.Y.; Dufour J.F.; Müllhaupt B.; Semela D.; Heim M.H.; Moradpour D.; Cerny A.; Malinverni R.; Booth D.R.; Suppiah V.; George J.; Argiro L.; Halfon P.; Bourlière M.; Talal A.H.; Jacobson I.M.; Patin E.; Nalpas B.; Poynard T.; Pol S.; Abel L.; Kutalik Z.; Negro F.
Data(s)

2015

Resumo

OBJECTIVE: The natural course of chronic hepatitis C varies widely. To improve the profiling of patients at risk of developing advanced liver disease, we assessed the relative contribution of factors for liver fibrosis progression in hepatitis C. DESIGN: We analysed 1461 patients with chronic hepatitis C with an estimated date of infection and at least one liver biopsy. Risk factors for accelerated fibrosis progression rate (FPR), defined as ≥0.13 Metavir fibrosis units per year, were identified by logistic regression. Examined factors included age at infection, sex, route of infection, HCV genotype, body mass index (BMI), significant alcohol drinking (≥20 g/day for ≥5 years), HIV coinfection and diabetes. In a subgroup of 575 patients, we assessed the impact of single nucleotide polymorphisms previously associated with fibrosis progression in genome-wide association studies. Results were expressed as attributable fraction (AF) of risk for accelerated FPR. RESULTS: Age at infection (AF 28.7%), sex (AF 8.2%), route of infection (AF 16.5%) and HCV genotype (AF 7.9%) contributed to accelerated FPR in the Swiss Hepatitis C Cohort Study, whereas significant alcohol drinking, anti-HIV, diabetes and BMI did not. In genotyped patients, variants at rs9380516 (TULP1), rs738409 (PNPLA3), rs4374383 (MERTK) (AF 19.2%) and rs910049 (major histocompatibility complex region) significantly added to the risk of accelerated FPR. Results were replicated in three additional independent cohorts, and a meta-analysis confirmed the role of age at infection, sex, route of infection, HCV genotype, rs738409, rs4374383 and rs910049 in accelerating FPR. CONCLUSIONS: Most factors accelerating liver fibrosis progression in chronic hepatitis C are unmodifiable.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_C09F480FD4C4

isbn:1468-3288 (Electronic)

pmid:25214320

doi:10.1136/gutjnl-2014-306997

isiid:000360979800016

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Gut, vol. 64, no. 10, pp. 1605-1615

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article