| Literature DB >> 26424404 |
Kali Zhou1, Fengyu Hu2, Charles Wang3,4, Min Xu5, Yun Lan6, Jamie P Morano7, Stanley M Lemon8,9, Joseph D Tucker10,11, Weiping Cai12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: End-stage liver disease and hepatocellular carcinoma due to hepatitis C virus (HCV) co-infection are increasingly common causes of death among HIV-infected individuals. However, there are few clinical investigations of HIV/HCV co-infected individuals from low and middle-income nations. Here, we compare the epidemiology of HCV-infected and HIV/HCV co-infected individuals in Southern China and examine hepatic fibrosis scores in co-infected individuals.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26424404 PMCID: PMC4589973 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-015-1135-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Demographic and clinical baseline characteristics
| Demographic or clinical data | Mono-infection ( | Co-infection ( | Total ( |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (y), mean ± SD | 39.9 ± 12.6 | 36.6 ± 6.3 | 38.3 ± 9.9 | 0.133 |
| Male gender, | 49 (57) | 72 (81) | 121 (69) |
|
| Marital status, | 0.609 | |||
| Married | 55 (64) | 69 (78) | 124 (71) | |
| Not married | 13 (15) | 20 (22) | 33 (19) | |
| Unknown | 18 (21) | 0 (0) | 18 (10) | |
| Education status, |
| |||
| < HS education, | 12 (14) | 74 (83) | 86 (49) | |
| > HS education | 47 (55) | 15 (17) | 62 (35) | |
| Unknown | 27 (31) | 0 (0) | 27 (15) | |
| Employment status, | 0.280 | |||
| Employed or student | 47 (55) | 56 (63) | 103 (59) | |
| Unemployed | 19 (22) | 33 (37) | 52 (30) | |
| Unknown | 20 (23) | 0 (0) | 20 (11) | |
| HCV risk factor, |
| |||
| IDU | 3 (4) | 72 (81) | 75 (43) | |
| Blood transfusion | 37 (43) | 2 (2) | 39 (22) | |
| Sexual | 0 (0) | 11 (12) | 11 (6) | |
| Othera | 46 (54) | 4 (5) | 50 (29) | |
| Unknown | 25 (29) | 1 (1) | 26 (15) | |
| HCV genotype, |
| |||
| 1a | 3 (4) | 1 (1) | 4 (2) | 0.362 |
| 1b | 57 (66) | 15 (17) | 72 (41) |
|
| 2a | 5 (6) | 1 (1) | 6 (3) | 0.113 |
| 3a | 3 (3) | 16 (18) | 19 (11) |
|
| 3b | 6 (7) | 9 (10) | 15 (9) | 0.459 |
| 6a | 12 (14) | 47 (53) | 59 (34) |
|
| AST, median (IQR) | 38 (29–65) | 54 (36–92) | 43 (32–73) |
|
| ALT, median (IQR) | 47.5 (32–90) | 49 (33–81) | 49 (32–85) | 0.794 |
| Platelet count (^10), | 185 ± 69 | 179 ± 69 | 182 ± 69 | 0.644 |
| mean ± SD | ||||
| APRI scoreb, |
| |||
| Class 1 | 43 (50) | 26 (28) | 68 (39) | |
| Class 2 | 26 (30) | 40 (45) | 66 (38) | |
| Class 3 | 17 (20) | 24 (27) | 41 (23) | |
| FIB-4 scorec, |
| |||
| Class 1 | 55 (64) | 41 (46) | 96 (55) | |
| Class 2 | 15 (17) | 34 (38) | 49 (28) | |
| Class 3 | 16 (19) | 14 (16) | 30 (17) |
Abbreviations: IDU intravenous drug use
aOther iatrogenic is defined by reporting of HCV transmission route through other medical or dental routes besides blood transfusion
bAPRI Categories: APRI Class 1 (Score < 0.5), APRI Class 2 (Score 0.51–1.5), APRI Class 3 (Score > 1.5)
cFIB-4 Categories: FIB-4 Class 1 (Score < 1.45), FIB-4 Class 2 (Score 1.46–3.25), FIB-4 Class 3 (Score > 3.25)
Bold p-values are significant at the 0.05 level
Fig. 1Phylogenetic tree analysis of HCV core protein gene sequences (n = 175). Shown are HCV mono-infected (blue circles) and HCV/HIV co-infected samples (red triangles)
Correlates of HIV/HCV co-infection using bivariate (OR) and multivariate logistic regression (AOR) modeling
| Characteristic | OR (95 % CI) |
| AOR (95 % CI) |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IDU transmission | 117.18 (33.00–416.13) |
| 46.25 (8.39–254.88) |
|
| Did not complete high school | 19.32 (8.32–44.87) |
| 17.39 (4.45–67.96) |
|
| Blood transmission | 0.03 (0.01–0.13) |
| 0.08 (0.01–0.57) |
|
| HCV genotype 6a | 6.02 (2.97–12.22) |
| ||
| HCV genotype 3a | 3.83 (1.21–12.14) |
| ||
| Male | 3.20 (1.62–6.31) |
| ||
| Guangdong province | 3.07 (1.27–7.41) |
| ||
| Increasing age | 0.97 (0.94–0.997) |
| ||
| Unknown HCV risk factor | 0.18 (0.05–0.65) |
| ||
| HCV genotype 1b | 0.13 (0.07–0.26) |
| Model AIC =72.14 | |
Abbreviations: OR odds ratio, AOR adjusted odds ratio, CI confidence interval, IDU intravenous drug use, AIC Aikaike information criteria. Missing data were excluded from statistical analysis. Bold p-values are significant at the 0.05 level
Associations with FIB-4 score among HIV/HCV co-infected individuals (n = 89)
| Correlate | β Coefficient (95 % CI) |
| β Adjusted Coefficient (95 % CI) |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years | 0.10 (0.03,0.17) |
| 0.09 (0.030, 0.153) |
| ||
| Unemployed | 1.24 (0.36,2.13) |
| 1.07 (0.26, 1.87) |
| ||
| HCV Genotype 3a | 2.15 (1.01,3.28) |
| 2.18 (1.17, 3.18) |
| ||
| Immunosuppression | ART Naïve ( | ART ( | ||||
| CD4+ ≤ 50 cells/μL | 15 | 0 | 2.00 (0.02,3.98) |
| 2.39 (0.73, 4.07) |
|
| CD4+ 51–200 cells/μL | 24 | 3 | 1.07 (−0.79,2.92) | 0.256 | 1.30 (−0.25, 2.84) | 0.098 |
| CD4+ 201–350 cells/μL | 7 | 20 | 1.42 (−0.44,3.27) | 0.132 | 1.65 (0.10, 3.20) |
|
| CD4+ 351–500 cells/μL | 5 | 9 | 0.27 (−1.74,2.27) | 0.793 | 0.44 (−1.23, 2.11) | 0.600 |
| CD4+ 501–1000 cells/μL | 1 | 5 | Referent | Referent |
Abbreviations: ART antiretroviral therapy, CI confidence interval. For HCV mono-infected patients, HCV genotype 3a was not found to correlate with increased FIB-4 score (p = 0.914). No significant correlations were found with APRI score. Bold p-values are significant at the 0.05 level