[Hepatitis C virus-associated and metabolic steatosis. Different or overlapping diseases?].

Amedeo Lonardo, Paola Loria, Luigi E Adinolfi, Augusto Andreana, Giuseppe Ruggiero, Nicola Carulli
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Abstract

Hepatic steatosis is the hallmark of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), which is the consequence of multiple metabolic derangements among which insulin resistance plays a pivotal role. Steatosis is, also, a feature of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. However, in chronic hepatitis C, the prevalence of steatosis is 2.5-fold more elevated than that expected by a chance concurrence with NAFLD, suggesting that HCV may be implied in the development of steatosis. As observed in NAFLD, in patients infected with HCV genotype 1 steatosis is associated with an increased body mass index. On the other hand, in patients infected with genotype 3 the extent of steatosis strictly correlates with the viral load indicating that steatosis is mainly "virus-related". Regardless of the "metabolic" or "viral" etiology, hepatic steatosis in HCV contributes to the progression of liver fibrosis, to the development of hepatocellular carcinoma and to an impaired response to interferon treatment. Features such as obesity, insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes mellitus are shared by NAFLD and HCV-associated steatosis. In addition, HCV infection, directly or through steatosis, favors the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus. Hyperlipidemia is an independent predictor of the development of NAFLD, but not of HCV-associated steatosis. Arterial hypertension is common in nonalcoholic steatohepatitis patients, and HCV infection has recently been acknowledged as an independent risk factor for atherosclerosis. The role of iron in the progression of both NAFLD and HCV-associated steatosis remains controversial while lipoperoxidation and oxidative stress are pathogenic mechanisms shared by both. Some metabolic risk factors may be shared by both HCV-associated steatosis and NAFLD although the disease progression and pathophysiological background may be different. Preliminary data suggest that the therapeutic options for NAFLD may also be useful to improve HCV-associated steatosis.

丙型肝炎病毒相关和代谢性脂肪变性。不同的或重叠的疾病?
肝脂肪变性是非酒精性脂肪性肝病(NAFLD)的标志,是多种代谢紊乱的结果,其中胰岛素抵抗起关键作用。脂肪变性也是丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)感染的一个特征。然而,在慢性丙型肝炎中,脂肪变性的患病率比与NAFLD同时发生的预期高2.5倍,这表明HCV可能隐含在脂肪变性的发展中。正如在NAFLD中观察到的那样,感染HCV基因1型脂肪变性的患者与体重指数增加有关。另一方面,在基因3型感染的患者中,脂肪变性的程度与病毒载量严格相关,表明脂肪变性主要与“病毒相关”。无论“代谢性”或“病毒性”病因,HCV中的肝脂肪变性都有助于肝纤维化的进展、肝细胞癌的发展以及对干扰素治疗的反应受损。肥胖、胰岛素抵抗和2型糖尿病是NAFLD和hcv相关脂肪变性的共同特征。此外,HCV感染,直接或通过脂肪变性,有利于2型糖尿病的发展。高脂血症是NAFLD发展的独立预测因子,但不是hcv相关脂肪变性的预测因子。动脉高血压在非酒精性脂肪性肝炎患者中很常见,HCV感染最近被认为是动脉粥样硬化的独立危险因素。铁在NAFLD和hcv相关脂肪变性进展中的作用仍存在争议,而脂质过氧化和氧化应激是两者共有的致病机制。尽管hcv相关脂肪变性和NAFLD的疾病进展和病理生理背景可能不同,但一些代谢危险因素可能是共同的。初步数据表明,NAFLD的治疗方案也可能有助于改善丙型肝炎相关脂肪变性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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