| Literature DB >> 29751499 |
Cesare Mazzaro1, Luigino Dal Maso2, Endri Mauro3, Valter Gattei4, Michela Ghersetti5, Pietro Bulian6, Giulia Moratelli7, Gabriele Grassi8, Francesca Zorat9, Gabriele Pozzato10.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The clinical and therapeutic management of mixed cryoglobulinemia (MC) remains a subject of controversy. In addition, most studies have not recorded the long-term follow-up and the outcome of these cases.Entities:
Keywords: hepatitis C virus; interferon alpha; mixed cryoglobulinemia; rituximab; steroids
Year: 2018 PMID: 29751499 PMCID: PMC6023473 DOI: 10.3390/diseases6020035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diseases ISSN: 2079-9721
Clinical, histological and biochemical features of the 246 patients affected by mixed cryoglobulinemia (MC).
| Characteristics | All Cases (246) | Type II MC (191 Cases) | Type III MC (55 Cases) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male/Female ratio | 0.53 | 0.52 | 0.57 | ns |
| Mean age at the diagnosis (range) | 60 (26–83) | 60 (26–77) | 60 (34–83) | ns |
| Mean follow-up (years) (range) | 9.2 (1–27) | 9.0 (1–10) | 9.7 (0.5–10) | ns |
| Clinical features at presentation | ||||
| Purpura (%) | 177 (72%) | 148 (77%) | 29 (53%) | <0.01 |
| Arthralgias (%) | 143 (58%) | 120 (63%) | 23 (42%) | <0.04 |
| Sicca syndrome (%) | 22 (9%) | 21 (11%) | 1 (2%) | ns |
| Raynaud phenomenon (%) | 34 (14%) | 29 (15%) | 5 (9%) | ns |
| Skin ulcers (%) | 7 (3%) | 7 (4%) | 0 | ns |
| Peripheral neuropathy (%) | 52 (21%) | 47 (25%) | 5 (9%) | <0.03 |
| Chronic hepatitis (%) | 173 (70%) | 134 (70%) | 39 (71%) | ns |
| Glomerulonephritis (%) | 19 (8%) | 17 (9%) | 2 (4%) | ns |
| Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (%) | 38 (15%) | 35 (18%) | 3 (5%) | <0.01 |
| Biochemical and virological features | ||||
| Cryocrit (%) | 3.8 ± 4.0 | 4.6 ± 4.6 | 2.0 ± 1.5 | <0.05 |
| Rheumatoid factor (U/L) NV < 40 | 296 ± 691 | 343 ± 748 | 157 ± 382 | <0.03 |
| C4 NV > 10 | 9.4 ± 7.0 | 9.0 ± 7.3 | 10 ± 4.5 | <0.04 |
| Anti-HCV antibodies | 238 | |||
| HCV genotype 1–4 | 116 (47%) | 93 (49%) | 23 (42%) | ns |
| HCV genotype 2–3 | 34 (14%) | 22 (12%) | 12 (23%) | ns |
| HBsAg | 11 (4.5%) | 8 (5%) | 3 (5%) | |
| Anti-HBs | 22 (9%) | 14 (7%) | 6 (11%) | ns |
| AST U/L NV < 36 | 66 ± 64 | 68 ± 61 | 60 ± 37 | ns |
| ALT U/L NV < 45 | 69 ± 58 | 71 ± 62 | 62 ± 38 | ns |
| GGT U/L NV < 36 | 66 ± 23 | 68 ± 22 | 63 ± 24 | ns |
| Creatinine NV < 1.0 mg% | 1.0 ± 0.2 | 1.0 ± 0.2 | 1.0 ± 0.2 | ns |
| Outcomes | ||||
| Death | 72 (29%) | 63 (33%) | 9 (17%) | <0.05 |
C4: complement component four, HBsAg: hepatitis B surface antigen, anti-HBs: antibodies against hepatitis B surface antigen, AST: aspartate aminotransferase, ALT: alanino-aminotransferase, GGT: gammaglutamyl-transpeptidase.
Figure 1Overall survival of the patients affected by HCV-positive MC. 5-year Survival 84% (95% CI: 78–88%), 10-year Survival 74% (95% CI: 67–79%) MC: mixed cryoglobulinemia, CI: confidence intervals.
Causes of death in the 246 cases affected by mixed cryoglobulinemia.
| Causes of Death | All Patients | Type II MC | Type III MC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liver cirrhosis | 38 | 32 (51%) | 6 (67%) |
| Heart failure | 11 | 10 (16%) | 1 (11%) |
| Renal insufficiency | 8 | 6 (10%) | 2 (22%) |
| Severe infections | 8 | 8 (13%) | 0 |
| Vasculitis | 3 | 3 (5%) | 0 |
| B-cell lymphoma | 3 | 3 (5%) | 0 |
| Myocardial infarction | 1 | 1 (2%) | 0 |
| Total cases | 72 | 63 | 9 |
MC: mixed cryoglobulinemia, Liver cirrhosis included all complications of the diseases (hepatic encephalopathy, oesophageal varices bleeding, liver failure, hepatocellular carcinoma).
Figure 2Observed 10-year overall survival in MC Type (II vs. III). Type II: 5-year Survival 81% (95% CI: 75–86%) 10-year Survival 71% (95% CI: 63–77%). Type III: 5-year Survival 92% (95% CI: 80–97%) 10-year Survival 84% (95% CI: 69–92%). MC: mixed cryoglobulinemia, CI: confidence intervals.
Efficacy and safety of different therapies in 180 cases of MC. As shown, the best virological responses have been obtained with DAA, while the best clinical and immunological responses have been with rituximab. Of note, some cases received more than one therapy (265 treatments for 180 cases).
| Type of Therapy | All Patients | CM Type II | CM Type III | Clinical Response | Immunological Response | SVR | Refractory Disease | Severe Infection after Therapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IFN as monotherapy (%) | 61 | 50 | 11 | 15 (24%) | 14 (22%) | 15 (4%) | 6 (9%) | 2 (3%) |
| IFN+Ribavirine (%) | 20 | 15 | 5 | 8 (40%) | 4 (20%) | 8 (40%) | 2 (10%) | 1 (5%) |
| Peg-IFN + Ribavirine (%) | 21 | 18 | 3 | 7 (33%) | 4 (19%) | 7 (33%) | 6 (28%) | 0 |
| Corticosteroids alone (%) | 52 | 43 | 9 | 4 (7%) | 3 (6%) | 0 | 12 (23%) | 2 (3%) |
| Alkylant + Corticosteroids (%) | 8 | 8 | 0 | 3 (37%) | 3 (37%) | 0 | 3 (37%) | 2 (25%) |
| Plasmaferesys + steroids (%) | 12 | 11 | 1 | 4 (33%) | 4 (33%) | 0 | 1 (8%) | 1 (8%) |
| Rituximab (%) | 6 | 6 | 0 | 4 (66%) | 4 (66%) | 0 | 2 (33%) | 1 (16%) |
| DAAs (%) | 19 | 14 | 5 | 8 (42%) | 6 (32%) | 19 (100%) | 1 (5%) | 0 |
Figure 3Survival rate according to the therapy. “IFN” includes patients who underwent interferon therapy (IFN) as monotherapy, IFN in combination with ribavirin (IFN + RIBA) and Pegilated IFN plus RIBA (PEG-IFN + RIBA) without a sustained virological response (non-responders or relapsers). “No IFN” includes patients who underwent immuno-suppressive treatments that is, steroids in combination with alkylating agents/rituximab and/or cyclosporine and/or cyclophosphamide. IFN vs. No IFN p < 0.0001.