Endothelial dysfunction correlates with liver fibrosis in chronic HCV infection.
Michele BaroneMaria Teresa ViggianiAnnabianca AmorusoSerafina SchiraldiAnnapaola ZitoFiorella DevitoFrancesca CorteseMichele GesualdoNatale BrunettiAlfredo Di LeoPietro ScicchitanoMarco Matteo CicconePublished in: Gastroenterology research and practice (2015)
Background. Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection can exert proatherogenic activities due to its direct action on vessel walls and/or via the chronic inflammatory process involving the liver. Aims. To clarify the role of HCV in atherosclerosis development in monoinfected HCV patients at different degrees of liver fibrosis and with no risk factors for coronary artery disease. Methods. Forty-five patients were included. Clinical, serological, and anthropometric parameters, liver fibrosis (transient liver elastometry (fibroscan) and aspartate aminotransferase to platelet ratio index (APRI)), carotid intima-media thickness (c-IMT), and brachial artery flow-mediated vasodilatation (FMD) were assessed. Patients were divided into 3 tertiles according to fibroscan values. Results. Patients in the third tertile (fibroscan value >11.5 KPa) showed FMD values were significantly lower than second and first tertiles (4.7 ± 1.7% versus 7.1 ± 2.8%, p = 0.03). FMD values were inversely related to liver elastomeric values. c-IMT values were normal. The risk for endothelial dysfunction development in the third tertile (p = 0.02) was 6.9 higher than the first tertile. A fibroscan value >11.5 KPa had a positive predictive power equal to 79% for endothelial dysfunction. Conclusions. HCV advanced liver fibrosis promotes atherosclerosis by inducing endothelial dysfunction independently of common cardiovascular risk factors.
Keyphrases
- liver fibrosis
- hepatitis c virus
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- cardiovascular risk factors
- coronary artery disease
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- cardiovascular disease
- prognostic factors
- heart failure
- oxidative stress
- type diabetes
- metabolic syndrome
- cerebral ischemia
- cardiovascular events
- transcatheter aortic valve replacement
- breast cancer risk