Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3261791 Digestive and Liver Disease 2015 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundPatients with chronic hepatitis C have an increased risk of diabetes mellitus but the type and risk of developing diabetes-related complications have not yet been evaluated.MethodsIn order to compare the incidence of diabetic microangiopathy in patients with new onset diabetes without microangiopathy we recruited 54 hepatitis C virus (HCV)-positive and 119 HCV-negative patients from January 2005 to December 2006. All patients were followed-up every 6 months for liver and diabetic complications and incidence of cardiovascular diseases up to December 2012 when data were retrospectively analyzed.ResultsThe two cohorts were comparable at enrolment except for mean body mass index, obesity rate and family history of diabetes (p = 0.007). After 7.2 years of follow-up, 13 HCV-positive (24.1%) and 37 HCV-negative patients (31%) showed at least one microangiopathic complication (p = 0.34); 5 HCV-positive (9.3%) and 13 HCV-negative patients (10.8%) reported cardiovascular diseases (p = 0.2); 14 HCV-positive (24.5%) compared to 0 HCV-negative patients developed liver-related complications (p = 0.0003). One HCV-positive patient died due to liver cancer, 1 HCV-negative patient died from myocardial infarction (p = 0.3). Increasing age (HR = 1.04, 95% CI: 1.00–1.07, p = 0.04) and smoking (HR = 2.94, 95% CI: 1.06–8.17, p = 0.04) were positively associated to diabetic complications.ConclusionsIncidence of microangiopathy is not significantly different in diabetics with or without chronic hepatitis C.

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Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
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