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Metabolic disorders are linked to liver scarring and fat accumulation in HIV-positive people.
By
Liz Highleyman
July 31, 2017
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July 31, 2017
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Metabolic syndrome, diabetes and obesity are risk factors for the
development of liver fibrosis and fat accumulation among people living
with HIV, even if they don’t also have hepatitis B or C, according to a
pair of studies presented last week at the 9th International AIDS
Society Conference on HIV Science in Paris (IAS 2017).
In
the era of effective antiretroviral therapy (ART), which has reduced
the number of deaths from opportunistic infections, liver disease has
become a major cause of illness and death among people with HIV. In many
cases coinfection with hepatitis B virus (HBV) or hepatitis C virus
(HCV) plays a role, but people can develop serious liver disease even
without these viruses.
Viruses, heavy alcohol
consumption, exposure to toxins and other causes of liver injury can
lead to fibrosis and steatosis. Fibrosis occurs when scar tissue
replaces normal liver cells known as hepatocytes. Cirrhosis is the most
advanced stage of fibrosis. Steatosis occurs when hepatocytes start to
fill up with fat. Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease
(NAFLD) develops in people who do not drink heavily; its more advanced
stage is known as non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). Over time, these
progressive conditions can lead to liver function impairment, liver
cancer and the need for a liver transplant.
Maud
Lemoine, MD, of Imperial College London presented findings from a study
looking at the effect of metabolic syndrome on the prevalence and
severity of liver fibrosis in HIV-positive people without viral
hepatitis (known as HIV monoinfection).
Metabolic syndrome
is a cluster of risk factors associated with elevated cardiovascular
risk, including abdominal obesity (having a “beer belly” or “spare
tire”), high blood pressure, abnormal blood fat levels (high
triglycerides and low HDL cholesterol) and high blood glucose, a sign of
insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes.
The METAFIB
study, conducted at a single center in France, included 478 HIV-positive
people without HBV or HCV infection who reported that they were not
heavy alcohol drinkers and did not have other causes of chronic liver
disease.
Liver fibrosis was assessed using a
noninvasive imaging method known as transient elastography (FibroScan),
which measures liver stiffness using sound waves. Among the participants
with valid liver stiffness results, 203 people who had metabolic
syndrome were matched according to age and sex with 202 people who did
not.
Nearly 90 percent were men and the average age was
53. Participants had been HIV positive for around 17 years on average.
Most were on ART with an undetectable viral load, and the mean CD4 count
was over 600 cells/mm3.
People with
metabolic syndrome had a higher body mass index than those without the
condition (26.0 versus 23.2), and they were more likely to be obese,
defined as a BMI of 30 or higher (13.3 percent versus 3.5 percent).
Those with metabolic syndrome were also more likely to have insulin
resistance (49.0 percent versus 8.5 percent) or type 2 diabetes (15.3
percent versus 1.0 percent). This group also had higher levels of liver
enzymes and various inflammatory markers in their blood.
The
researchers found that participants with metabolic syndrome were
significantly more likely than those without it to have liver fibrosis. A
quarter of people with metabolic syndrome had moderate fibrosis,
compared with about 7 percent of those without. Advanced fibrosis (about
15 percent versus about 3 percent) and cirrhosis (about 8 percent
versus around 1 percent) followed similar patterns.
People
with moderate or worse fibrosis had significantly higher levels of
inflammatory markers than people without fibrosis or with only mild
fibrosis, including C-reactive protein, interleukin 6, leptin and
adiponectin (two hormones produced by adipose or fat tissue) and a
marker linked to activation of macrophages (a type of immune system
white blood cell). The same pattern was seen when comparing people with
and without cirrhosis.
After adjusting for other
factors, people with metabolic syndrome were four times more likely to
have advanced or worse fibrosis and eight times more likely to have
cirrhosis. Obese people were three times more likely to have advanced
fibrosis and four times more likely to have cirrhosis. However,
HIV-related factors, including ART use, did not predict fibrosis or
cirrhosis status.
“HIV-monoinfected patients with
metabolic syndrome are at risk of liver fibrosis and should be
systematically screened for liver fibrosis irrespective of transaminases
[liver enzyme levels] or HIV parameters,” the researchers concluded.
They
suggested that adipose tissue, insulin resistance and macrophage
activation “are probably key players” in the development of liver
fibrosis in HIV-positive people without viral hepatitis.
In
a related study, Hugo Perazzo of Fundação Oswaldo Cruz in Rio de
Janeiro and colleagues looked at factors associated with liver fibrosis
and steatosis among HIV-positive people without viral hepatitis who were
on long-term ART. Fibrosis and steatosis were determined using
FibroScan.
The researchers hypothesized that a single
“hit”—such as type 2 diabetes, obesity or a genetic risk factor—could
cause simple steatosis but that progression to cirrhosis or NASH may
require additional hits. Chronic inflammation and immune activation
associated with HIV might be one such factor or perhaps use of
hepatotoxic antiretroviral drugs, they suggested.
This
analysis included 395 participants from the PROSPEC-HIV cohort. In
contrast to the previous study, a majority (60 percent) were women and
the average age was 45. Again, they had well-controlled HIV, with 80
percent having an undetectable viral load and the median CD4 count was
over 660 cells/mm3. They had been on ART for a median of
seven years, and many of them had used older antiretrovirals that can
cause metabolic or liver-related side effects.
About a
third of study participants had metabolic syndrome, but even more had at
least one of its components, such as abdominal obesity (68 percent) or
abnormal blood fat levels (61 percent). Ten percent had type 2 diabetes.
The
researchers found that 9 percent met the criteria for fibrosis and 35
percent met the criteria for steatosis. Women and men were equally
likely to have fibrosis, but men were significantly more likely to have
steatosis. Older age was a risk factor for fibrosis but not for
steatosis.
In a multivariate analysis, having type 2
diabetes more than doubled the risk for fibrosis, while having a CD4
count under 200 cells/mm3 increased the risk by nearly
eightfold. Looking at steatosis, metabolic syndrome overall was
associated with a fourfold higher risk, while two of its components
features—obesity and type 2 diabetes—raised the risk even more (by
nearly 11 and 10 times, respectively).
In addition,
longer duration of ART use was “associated with steatosis independently
of metabolic factors,” the researchers concluded. This was especially
true for older nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors such as
Retrovir (AZT or zidovudine) and Zerit (d4T or stavudine).
The
researchers recommended that prevention and management of noninfectious
conditions such as metabolic syndrome should be integrated into HIV
care to decrease the burden of liver disease.
Read more articles from POZ, here.
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