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Extrahepatic immunological manifestations of hepatitis C virus in dialysis patients.

C Canavese, Z Hollò,G Ciccone,V Ghisetti,A Barbui,F Fop, G Martina, F Forgnone, P Novo, A Thea,A Grill,G Marchiaro

JOURNAL OF NEPHROLOGY(2000)

Cited 36|Views4
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Abstract
Background. Hepatitis C virus (HCN) infection may be associated with various extrahepatic immunological disorders. Uremic patients on chronic regular dialytic treatment (RDT) frequently develop immunological abnormalities. The aim of this study was to evaluate the probability that HCV infection creates an increased risk for extrahepatic immunological abnormalities in chronic RDT patients. Subjects and Methods. In a series of one hundred sixteen chronic RDT patients, HCV status was determined by anti-HCV antibodies, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) RNA and viral genotyping. After excluding four anti-HCV negative/PCR-RNA positive patients, a comparison was made between 51 anti-HCV negative/PCR-RNA negative and 61 anti-HCV positive patients, this latter group including seventeen PCR-RNA negative, fifteen genotype 1, thirteen genotype 2, three genotype 3, four genotype 4, four undeterminable genotype and five mixed genotypes. The following investigations were performed: cryoglobulinemia (presence, titer and, when possible, identification), monoclonal gammopathy, antineutrophil cytoplasm antibodies, antidouble stranded DNA antibodies, circulating immunocomplexes and immunoglobulin levels. Results. Cryoglobulinemia was found in 77% of anti-HICV positive versus 29% of anti-HCV negative patients, and cryocrit > 1% in 50% versus 9.8% respectively, p =< 0.01. Also cryoglobulin concentration was higher (logarithmic transformation: 4.38+/-0.94 vs 3.11+/-1.06, p =< 0.001) in anti-HCV positive versus negative patients. Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed a significantly increased odds ratio (12.0, confidence interval 3.0 to 48.3) for having high levels of cryoglobulins (cryocrit >1%) after adjusting for age and dialytic age. The prevalence of this abnormality did not differ significantly among patients infected with different genotypes, but a tendency towards a lower frequency was observed in the anti-HCV positive/PCR negative subgroup. Cryoglobulins were identified as type I (2 anti-HCV positive case), type II (2 anti-HCN positive and I anti-HCN negative case) and type 3 (1 anti-HCV negative case). The frequency of monoclonal gammopathy was not significantly different between anti-HCV positive and anti-HCV negative patients (6,5% versus 2%) as well as that of the other parameters evaluated except for Ige concentration which was higher in the anti-HCV positive group (1685+/-605 versus 1349+/-352 mg/dl, p 0.006). Five events, potentially linked to HCN infection, occurred in our anti-HCN positive patients: 2 cases of porphyria cutanea, 1 case of unexplained peripheral neuropathy, 1 cutaneous leukocytoclastic vasculitis, 1 death for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. In one anti-HCN positive patient treated with interferon-cr, the presence of cryoglobulins, monoclonal gammopathy and high IgG levels strictly paralleled that of viremia, disappearing during the recovery phase under treatment and reappearing shortly after stopping treatment. Conclusions. HCV infection provides a significantly increased risk for developing extrahepatic immunological abnormalities also in chronic RDT patients. It is possible that the clinical relevance of this event might be scant because of the low level of these abnormalities, but an awareness of its possibility should to be taken into account.
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Key words
hepatitis C virus genotypes,cryoglobulinemia,monoclonal gammopathy uremia
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