Sunday, August 5, 2018

Hepatitis C-Diabetes associated w-advanced fibrosis and progression in HCV non-genotype 3 patients

In case you missed it

Dig Liver Dis. 2018 Jul 17. pii: S1590-8658(18)30814-4. doi: 10.1016/j.dld.2018.07.003. 
[Epub ahead of print]

Diabetes is associated with advanced fibrosis and fibrosis progression in non-genotype 3 chronic hepatitis C patients.

Researchers investigated if diabetes is associated with progression from the non-cirrhotic liver to cirrhosis in non-genotype 3 chronic hepatitis C (CHC) patients. In the study 976 non-genotype 3 patients with HCV were studied, out of the 976 participants, 684 did not have cirrhosis. According to ultrasound findings, 60 patients developed cirrhosis during the follow-up period. In non-genotype 3 CHC patients, diabetes was correlated with progression from the non-cirrhotic liver to cirrhosis.

Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Diabetes is a risk factor of fibrosis progression in chronic hepatitis C (CHC). However, only one longitudinal study exploring whether diabetes is associated with progression from non-cirrhotic liver to cirrhosis in CHC patients has been conducted.

AIMS: 
We investigated whether diabetes is associated with progression from non-cirrhotic liver to cirrhosis in non-genotype 3 CHC patients.

METHODS: 
A cohort consisting of 976 non-genotype 3 patients histologically proven to have CHC was studied. After excluding patients with biopsy-proven or ultrasound-identified cirrhosis, there were 684 patients without cirrhosis. All 684 patients underwent hepatocellular carcinoma surveillance using ultrasound every 6 months, with a median duration of follow-up evaluation of 102.4 months. During the follow-up period, 60 patients developed cirrhosis according to ultrasound findings.

RESULTS: 
For the subgroup of 684 patients without cirrhosis, Kaplan-Meier survival analyses showed no significantly different cumulative incidences of cirrhosis (log-rank test; P = 0.71) among the patients with diabetes as compared to those without. However, after making adjustments for age, gender, fibrosis, steatosis, sustained virological response status, and obesity using Cox's proportional hazard model, diabetes was found to be an independent predictor for cirrhosis (HR = 1.9; 95% CI = 1.05-3.43, P = 0.03).

CONCLUSIONS: 
Diabetes is associated with progression from non-cirrhotic liver to cirrhosis in non-genotype 3 CHC patients.

KEYWORDS:
Diabetes; Genotype 3; Hepatitis C virus; Liver cirrhosis; Ultrasound
PMID: 30076015 DOI: 10.1016/j.dld.2018.07.003 
Full text article requires payment 

Saturday, August 4, 2018

Direct Antiviral Therapy of Hep C May Not Boost Hepatocellular-Carcinoma Risk

Direct Antiviral Therapy of Hep C May Not Boost Hepatocellular-Carcinoma Risk
Treatment of hepatitis C (HCV) with direct-acting antiviral agents does not appear to increase the risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in individuals with cirrhosis, researchers from France report.



On This Blog
HCC during and after direct-acting antiviral therapy in patients with hepatitis C
Index of research articles investigating the possible risk of developing liver cancer (hepatocellular carcinoma, or HCC) during and after direct-acting antiviral therapy in patients with hepatitis C.

Statins: old drugs as new therapy for liver diseases?

Journal of Hepatology
Articles in Press 

Statins: old drugs as new therapy for liver diseases?
Elisa Pose, Jonel Trebicka, Rajeshwar P. Mookerjee, Paolo Angeli, Pere Ginès

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Highlights
•Statins have shown potential beneficial effects in chronic inflammatory diseases, including chronic lung diseases, neurological disorders and chronic kidney disease.
•Studies in animal models of liver diseases have shown that statins reduce liver fibrosis, improve endothelial dysfunction and decrease portal pressure.
•In patients with pre-cirrhotic conditions, statins may have beneficial effects by preventing disease progression.
•In patients with cirrhosis, statins have shown potential beneficial effects by decreasing portal hypertension and risk of decompensation and may improve survival.
•RCTs in large series of patients are needed to confirm safety and beneficial effects of statins in patients with cirrhosis.

The Pot Breathalyzer Is Here. Maybe

August 4, 2018 8:02 AM ET
Heard on Weekend Edition Saturday
Eric Westervelt 
As legalization of recreational and medical marijuana continues to expand, police across the country are more concerned than ever about stoned drivers taking to the nation's roads and freeways, endangering lives.

With few accurate roadside tools to detect pot impairment, police today have to rely largely on field sobriety tests developed to fight drunk driving or old-fashioned observation, which can be foiled with Visine or breath mints.

That has left police, courts, public health advocates and recreational marijuana users themselves frustrated. Nine states and the District of Columbia have legalized recreational marijuana and 30 states and D.C. have legalized medical pot.

Read article, here..



Friday, August 3, 2018

Symptom burden and comorbid medical conditions in patients with HCV initiating direct acting antiviral therapy

A comprehensive assessment of patient reported symptom burden, medical comorbidities, and functional well being in patients initiating direct acting antiviral therapy for chronic hepatitis C: Results from a large US multi-center observational study

A comprehensive understanding of baseline symptom burden in patients with HCV is necessary to lay the groundwork for subsequent real-world investigations of potential changes in symptoms during DAA therapy and after virologic cure. We aimed to characterize patient-reported symptoms, medical conditions, and functional well-being in a large multi-center US cohort who initiated DAA therapy in clinical practices in 2016-2017. Our secondary aim was to evaluate sociodemographic/SDoH, liver-related, and other clinical features associated with these health outcomes.

Published: August 1, 2018 

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Abstract
Background
Symptom burden, medical comorbidities, and functional well-being of patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) initiating direct acting antiviral (DAA) therapy in real-world clinical settings are not known. We characterized these patient-reported outcomes (PROs) among HCV-infected patients and explored associations with sociodemographic, liver disease, and psychiatric/substance abuse variables.

Methods and findings
PROP UP is a large US multicenter observational study that enrolled 1,600 patients with chronic HCV in 2016–2017. Data collected prior to initiating DAA therapy assessed the following PROs: number of medical comorbidities; neuropsychiatric, somatic, gastrointestinal symptoms (PROMIS surveys); overall symptom burden (Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale); and functional well-being (HCV-PRO). Candidate predictors included liver disease markers and patient-reported sociodemographic, psychiatric, and alcohol/drug use features. Predictive models were explored using a random selection of 700 participants; models were then validated with data from the remaining 900 participants. The cohort was 55% male, 39% non-white, 48% had cirrhosis (12% with advanced cirrhosis); 52% were disabled or unemployed; 63% were on public health insurance or uninsured; and over 40% had markers of psychiatric illness. The median number of medical comorbidities was 4 (range: 0–15), with sleep disorders, chronic pain, diabetes, joint pain and muscle aches being present in 20–50%. Fatigue, sleep disturbance, pain and neuropsychiatric symptoms were present in over 60% and gastrointestinal symptoms in 40–50%. In multivariable validation models, the strongest and most frequent predictors of worse PROs were disability, unemployment, and use of psychiatric medications, while liver markers generally were not.

Conclusions
This large multi-center cohort study provides a comprehensive and contemporary assessment of the symptom burden and comorbid medical conditions in patients with HCV treated in real world settings. Pain, fatigue, and sleep disturbance were common and often severe. Sociodemographic and psychiatric markers were the most robust predictors of PROs. Future research that includes a rapidly changing population of HCV-infected individuals needs to evaluate how DAA therapy affects PROs and elucidate which symptoms resolve with viral eradication.

New online calculator predicts clinical improvement in liver failure after Hep C treatment

New online calculator predicts clinical improvement in liver failure after Hep C treatment
Naveed Saleh, MD, MS, for MDLinx | August 03, 2018
Investigators formulated a five-factor metric known as the BE3A score that offers specialists a shared decision-making tool to predict potential improvements after treatment in patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV)-associated liver failure, as detailed in a new study published in Gastroenterology
Continue reading @ MDLinx.

To use the calculator online, go to www.be3ascore.com.

Study - Gastroenterology
June 2018 Volume 154, Issue 8, Pages 2111–2121.e8

Long–term effect of liver fibrosis after SVR in patients with HCV

Journal of Viral Hepatitis, July 27, 2018 

Cirrhosis, High Age and High Body Mass Index Are Risk Factors for Persisting Advanced Fibrosis After Sustained Virological Response in Chronic Hepatitis C
M. Hedenstierna; A. Nangarhari; A. El-Sabini; O. Weiland; S. Aleman
J Viral Hepat. 2018;25(7):802-810.

The aim of this study was to investigate the long–term effect of achieved SVR on liver fibrosis, measured as liver stiffness with transient elastography, in a cohort with pretreatment advanced chronic HCV infection. We also aimed to identify risk factors associated with persisting fibrosis.

Abbreviations
BMI, body mass index; CI, confidence interval; DM, diabetes mellitus; FU, follow-up; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; HCV, hepatitis C virus; LSM, liver stiffness measurement; OR, odds ratio; SVR, sustained virological response.

Discussion Only
View Complete article: https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/898758_1
The long–term effect of achieved SVR on liver fibrosis in patients with HCV–induced advanced fibrosis has not been extensively investigated. To study this, fibrosis in our patients was assessed by LSM during long–term follow–up over more than 5–10 years. Our study shows that the vast majority of our 269 patients with pretreatment advanced fibrosis or cirrhosis improved their fibrosis during long–term follow–up after SVR. A minority, however, continued to have advanced fibrosis even after more than 5–10 years of follow–up. In this subset of patients, a point of no return for advanced liver fibrosis might have been reached, where improvement is not possible. Other possible explanations are contributing cofactors such as liver steatosis with inflammation and alcohol use as driving forces to maintain or even progress liver fibrosis. In this study, we identified pretreatment cirrhosis, high age and high BMI as the main risk factors for lack of improvement. The proportion of patients who maintained advanced fibrosis decreased among patients with longer follow–up time, indicating that fibrosis regression is a slow process that continues over time.

Several studies with varying follow–up times have compared pre– and post–treatment fibrosis stages.[10,19–27] Studies based on liver biopsies have all shown that fibrosis and also cirrhosis can improve after achievement of SVR in a majority of patients, but also that fibrosis will persist or progress after SVR in a subset of 1%–14%, confirming the results in our study.[19–23] In a large study including more than 3000 biopsied patients with a mean follow–up time of 20 months, a low baseline fibrosis stage, age below 40 and BMI below 27 were all factors strongly associated with lack of significant fibrosis at follow–up in patients with SVR.[19] The risk factors identified to be associated with persisting fibrosis found were the same as in our long–term study.

More recent studies have investigated fibrosis regression after SVR with LSM and biochemical markers. The diagnostic accuracy of these methods to detect persisting cirrhosis after SVR, however, has been questioned.[10,24] In a study comparing LSM with follow–up biopsies 61 months after achieved SVR, the sensitivity of LSM to detect cirrhosis after SVR was only 61% when standard pretreatment cut–offs were used.[10] On the other hand, the specificity for diagnosing cirrhosis with LSM after treatment reached 95%. As LSM measures both fibrosis and inflammation, rapid early improvement of liver stiffness after SVR could be explained by a reduction in liver inflammation, and not by fibrosis regression. This could suggest that patients with pretreatment cirrhosis defined by LSM, including some with severe inflammation and less advanced fibrosis, would have lower liver stiffness at follow–up than patients with biopsy–proven cirrhosis. Surprisingly, in our study, we observed the opposite. The difference was not significant, but could be explained by the fact that patients with cirrhosis defined by LSM had shorter follow–up times. This supports our conclusion that cirrhosis regression is a process that continues over time. Recently published studies with repeated LSM up to 2 years after achieved SVR have shown a rapid initial improvement of liver stiffness, but also a continued slower reduction, better reflecting true fibrosis regression.[25–27] The follow–up times in these studies were relatively short, but the findings support the results generated in our study. Another possible explanation for the initial rapid and later slower improvement of liver stiffness levels after SVR could be the remaining presence of nodular architecture in the liver, despite decreased amount of fibrosis.[21] Nodules are the hallmark for a histopathological definition of cirrhosis.[5] This implies that the persisting advanced fibrosis in our study, measured by LSM, probably is accurate, while we might have misclassified the stage of fibrosis in some of the cirrhotic patients that still had nodular architecture.

Although this study was not designed to assess the correlation between LSM and the risk to develop HCC, there were patients in our study with improved fibrosis who later developed HCC up to 15 years after SVR. This finding supports that surveillance for HCC should continue even in patients where cirrhosis has regressed after achieved SVR. The duration for such surveillance needs to be further studied. We have earlier found that diabetes and the presence of pretreatment cirrhosis were risk factors for the development of HCC after SVR had been achieved.[13] No direct correlation between diabetes mellitus and persisting advanced fibrosis was noted in this study. On the other hand, high BMI, known to be associated with diabetes, was found to be a risk factor for persisting advanced fibrosis.

There are several limitations to this study. It had a cross–sectional and retrospective design and lacked sequential LSMs for the included patients. However, in a preliminary prospective study on LSM data collected at 6–month intervals after SVR in 100 patients with F3–F4 fibrosis at baseline, 31% had persisting advanced fibrosis, similar to the results in our study.[28] Furthermore, in our study, a third of the eligible patients were excluded or lost to follow–up, which could introduce a selection bias. Baseline characteristics for the nonincluded patients were, however, comparable to the studied patients, reducing this bias. The clinical outcome was worse in the excluded group with higher occurrence of HCC and death, but the causes of death were not liver related in a majority of the cases.

Assessment of fibrosis after SVR with transient elastography and not liver histology may have caused us to underestimate the extent of advanced fibrosis at follow–up. However, the identified patients with maintained advanced fibrosis are probably correctly classified. As all our patients were treated with IFN–based regimens, we do not know if our findings are relevant for patients treated with IFN–free regimens. One recently published study, however, showed a statistically similar median change in LSM levels 24 weeks after the end of treatment in patients with SVR after IFN–containing and IFN–free regimens.[25]

To conclude, we found that the liver fibrosis after achievement of SVR improved in the vast majority of our patients after long–term follow–up. Our data indicate that fibrosis regression is an ongoing long–term process over years. Risk factors for lack of such improvement during follow–up were pretreatment cirrhosis, older age and high body mass index. Lifestyle intervention to decrease weight in obese persons and treatment before establishment of cirrhosis at a younger age should therefore be recommended to avoid persistence of advanced fibrosis after SVR.

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Abstract and Introduction
Patients and Methods
Results
Discussion

Wednesday, August 1, 2018

In Case You Missed It

10 TERRIFIC WAYS TO LOVE YOUR LIVER THIS SUMMER
Ever considered living your best liver fitness summer yet? Dive in. Transform. Shine on! There’s no better season to kick-start a liver positive lifestyle! Summer, with its delicious ripe produce and array of outdoor activities, provides a perfect backdrop to consider and revamp how your daily routines can create the space to practice and promote liver wellness. With chronic hepatitis, fatty liver disease (NAFLD), and cirrhosis on the rise, particularly in at-risk communities, it’s time to change our relationship to liver health awareness. Earlier this month, the CDC reported that the mortality rate for liver cancer has gone up by 43% over the past 15 years – and that’s despite the recent development of new treatments for hepatitis C and the availability of vaccines for hepatitis A and B! So now, more than ever, we all need to incorporate a healthy dose of liver lovin’ into our daily lifestyles.