Risk Of Developing Liver Cancer After HCV Treatment

Friday, November 5, 2010

Hepatitis C in type 2 diabetes: Evidence for a positive association

Seroprevalence of Hepatitis C in type 2 diabetes: Evidence for a positive association
Nauman A Jadoon, Mohammad A Shahzad, Rehan Yaqoob, Mansoor Hussain and Naseema Ali


Virology Journal 2010, 7:304 doi:10.1186/1743-422X-7-304

Published: 5 November 2010
Abstract (provisional)
type 2 diabetes mellitus= (T2DM).
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Background
There is a growing body of literature on the relationship of Hepatitis C virus infection (HCV) and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). However, there are certain gaps in literature and the data is inconclusive. This study was, therefore, carried out to determine the prevalence of HCV infection in diabetic patients and to elucidate the presence of any possible relationship between HCV and T2DM in this region.
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Methods
Serologic testing for anti-HCV antibody was done on a sample of 3000 individuals with type 2 diabetes mellitus *T2DM visiting Diabetes Clinic of Nishtar Medical College Hospital, Multan and 10,000 volunteer blood donors visiting blood bank of the same hospital during the study period using Accurate rapid immunochromatographic kits which was later confirmed by using Chemelex S.A third generation ELISA kit for positive cases. Data about various variables was collected from diabetic patients using a structured questionnaire after taking informed consent.
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Results
Prevalence rate of 13.7% for HCV infection was recorded among subjects having T2DM with seropositivity rate of 4.9% among the control group of volunteer blood donors without diabetes. The patients with T2DM were more likely to have HCV infection as compared to the control group (OR= 3.03, 95%CI= 2.64-3.48, p= 0.001).
Diabetic patients with age above 55 years had higher prevalence rate as compared to younger individuals.
Male patients had significantly high seropositivity as compared to female patients (15.3% vs. 12.4%, p=0.02). Those with duration of diabetes 11 years and above and the ones with good glycemic control had higher seroprevalence rates of 18.2% and 18.7% respectively. There was no statistically significant difference among subjects when the distribution of HCV was studied on the basis of marital status, locality, or family history of diabetes.
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Conclusions
The results show that there is a strong association between HCV and T2DM in the region as evident from significantly higher prevalence of HCV infection in diabetics as compared to the control group in the present study.

The complete article is available as a provisional PDF. The fully formatted PDF and HTML versions are in production.

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