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

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_C09F480FD4C4
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Impact of common risk factors of fibrosis progression in chronic hepatitis C.
Journal
Gut
Author(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.
ISSN
1468-3288 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0017-5749
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2015
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
64
Number
10
Pages
1605-1615
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal ArticlePublication Status: ppublish
Abstract
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.
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
30/10/2014 9:21
Last modification date
20/08/2019 15:35
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