| Literature DB >> 26885388 |
Theodoros Voulgaris1, Vassilios A Sevastianos1.
Abstract
Chronic hepatitis C virus infection is associated with significant morbidity and mortality, as a result of progression towards advanced natural course stages including cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. On the other hand, the SVR following successful therapy is generally associated with resolution of liver disease in patients without cirrhosis. Patients with cirrhosis remain at risk of life-threatening complications despite the fact that hepatic fibrosis may regress and the risk of complications such as hepatic failure and portal hypertension is reduced. Furthermore, recent data suggest that the risk of HCC and all-cause mortality is significantly reduced, but not eliminated, in cirrhotic patients who clear HCV compared to untreated patients and nonsustained virological responders. Data derived from studies have demonstrated a strong link between HCV infection and the atherogenic process. Subsequently HCV seems to represent a strong, independent risk factor for coronary heart disease, carotid atherosclerosis, stroke, and, ultimately, CVD related mortality. The advent of new direct acting antiviral therapy has dramatically increased the sustained virological response rates of hepatitis C infection. In this scenario, the cardiovascular risk has emerged and represents a major concern after the eradication of the virus which may influence the life expectancy and the quality of patients' life.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26885388 PMCID: PMC4738722 DOI: 10.1155/2016/7629318
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hepat Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1364
Figure 1Possible mechanisms connecting HCV infection and cardiovascular disease. HCV is considered a “metabolic” virus and is associated with metabolic disorders, in particular insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes mellitus, which are proatherogenic conditions. By inducing hepatic injury and activating peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), HCV increases circulating levels of proinflammatory cytokines, leading to peripheral IR and hyperinsulinemia. Furthermore, a key feature of HCV infection is associated with hyperhomocysteinaemia, hypoadiponectinaemia, oxidative stress, lipid peroxidation, and all components of the metabolic syndrome. Therefore, “viral” induced and “metabolic” steatosis, together with the direct stimulus of increased insulin levels on hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) likely stimulate the progression of fibrosis within the liver parenchyma. Furthermore, systemic inflammation, the procoagulative state, and direct viral effects on the vascular wall may contribute to the development and progression of the atherogenic process.
Characteristics of studies associating HCV infection and atheromatosis.
| Author, year, country | Study design | Association | Enrolled patients | Comments | Method of carotid atheromatosis assessment |
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| Ishizaka et al., 2002 [ | Cross-sectional population based | Positive | 4784/104 HCV infected | First study in this field, measuring IMT | Ultrasonography |
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| Tomiyama et al., 2003 [ | Cohort study | Positive | 7514/87 HCV infected | Increase arterial stiffness measured by pulse wave velocity | Pulse wave velocity |
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| Mostafa et al., 2010 [ | Cross-sectional | Positive | 329 anti-HCV positive/724 anti-HCV negative | Patients with active disease had higher risk compared to past infection | Ultrasonography |
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| Petta et al., 2012 [ | Case control | Positive | 174 genotype 1 infected/174 controls | Association between fibrosis and the presence of plaques | Ultrasonography |
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| Adinolfi et al., 2012 [ | Case control | Positive | 803/326 HCV infected | Association between HCV steatosis and atheromatosis | Ultrasonography |
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Huang et al., 2013 [ | Meta-analysis | Positive | Strongly correlates HCV infection to carotid atheromatosis | ||
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| Masia et al., 2011 [ | Cohort study | Negative | 138 HIV/63 HCV/HIV coinfected | No matching between exposed and control patients for any variable | Ultrasonography |
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| Caliskan et al., 2009 [ | Prospective 59 months follow-up | Negative | 36 HCV infected/36 controls | No matching between exposed and control patients for any variable | Ultrasonography |
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| Tien et al., 2009 [ | Cross-sectional | Negative | 1675/53 HCV monoinfected | HIV/HCV coinfection may be associated with a greater risk of carotid plaques | Ultrasonography |
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Völzke et al., 2004 [ | Cross-sectional | Negative | 4310/15 HCV infected | Very small number of HCV infected patients | Ultrasonography |
Characteristics of studies associating HCV infection and CAD.
| Author, year, country | Association | Subjects | Comment | |
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Vassalle et al., 2004 [ | Case control | Positive | 491 with CAD (6.3% HCV seropositive)/195 controls (2% HCV seropositive) | First study that suggested HCV seropositivity as one of the risk factors affecting the onset and development of CAD |
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| Butt et al., 2009 [ | Prospective observational cohort study, 5 yr follow-up | Positive | 82,083 HCV infected/89,582 HCV uninfected subjects | HCV infection is associated with a higher risk of CAD after adjustment for traditional risk factors |
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| Alyan et al., 2008 [ | Case control | Positive | 139 HCV seropositive/225 HCV seronegative patients | HCV infection is an independent predictor for increased coronary atherosclerosis (higher Reardon severity score) |
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| Adinolfi et al., 2013 [ | Retrospective cohort study | Positive | 820/78 HCV infected | A secondary analysis showed that HCV patients had higher prevalence of past ischemic heart disease |
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| Oliveira et al., 2013 [ | Cross-sectional comparative study | Positive | 62 HCV infected/11 controls | HCV infection was related to higher FRS as well as to higher pro-anti-inflammatory cytokine profile |
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| Enger et al., 2014 [ | Retrospective matched cohort study | Positive | 22,733 HCV infected/68,198 comparators | Arterial events, especially unstable angina and transient ischemic attack, were more frequently seen in HCV patients |
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| Satapathy et al., 2013 [ | Retrospective, case control study | Positive | 63 HCV infected patients/63 controls | The prevalence and severity of CAD were higher in HCV patients who were evaluated for CAD by angiogram compared with matched non-HCV patients |
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| Pothineni et al., 2014 [ | Retrospective cohort study | Positive | 8,251 HCV antibody positive/1,434 HCV RNA positive/14,799 HCV negative patients | Increased incidence of CHD events in patients with HCV seropositivity; the incidence is much higher in patients with detectable HCV RNA compared with patients with remote infection who are only antibody positive |
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| Wong et al., 2014 [ | Systematic review | Unclear association | Systematic review | |
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| Forde et al., 2012 [ | Retrospective, population cohort, 3.9 yr follow-up | Negative | 4809 HCV seropositive/71 668 seronegative | No correlation between HCV and MI but short period of follow-up of the subjects and moreover chronic HCV infection was poorly proved |
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| Arcari et al., 2006 [ | Case control | Negative | 292 case subjects/290 controls, overall 52 HCV positive | No association was found between HCV positivity and acute myocardial infarction |
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| Momiyama et al., 2005 [ | Case control | Negative | 524 with CAD (3.4% HCV infected)/106 controls | |