Hepatic steatosis in HIV/HCV co-infected patients: correlates, efficacy and outcomes of anti-HCV therapy: a paired liver biopsy study.

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Hepatic steatosis in HIV/HCV co-infected patients: correlates, efficacy and outcomes of anti-HCV therapy: a paired liver biopsy study. / Rodríguez-Torres, Maribel; Govindarajan, Sugantha; Solá, Ricard; Clumeck, Nathan; Lissen, Eduardo; Pessôa, Mário; Buggisch, Peter; Main, Janice; Depamphilis, Jean; Dieterich, Douglas T.

In: J HEPATOL, Vol. 48, No. 5, 5, 2008, p. 756-764.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rodríguez-Torres, M, Govindarajan, S, Solá, R, Clumeck, N, Lissen, E, Pessôa, M, Buggisch, P, Main, J, Depamphilis, J & Dieterich, DT 2008, 'Hepatic steatosis in HIV/HCV co-infected patients: correlates, efficacy and outcomes of anti-HCV therapy: a paired liver biopsy study.', J HEPATOL, vol. 48, no. 5, 5, pp. 756-764. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18314217?dopt=Citation>

APA

Rodríguez-Torres, M., Govindarajan, S., Solá, R., Clumeck, N., Lissen, E., Pessôa, M., Buggisch, P., Main, J., Depamphilis, J., & Dieterich, D. T. (2008). Hepatic steatosis in HIV/HCV co-infected patients: correlates, efficacy and outcomes of anti-HCV therapy: a paired liver biopsy study. J HEPATOL, 48(5), 756-764. [5]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18314217?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Rodríguez-Torres M, Govindarajan S, Solá R, Clumeck N, Lissen E, Pessôa M et al. Hepatic steatosis in HIV/HCV co-infected patients: correlates, efficacy and outcomes of anti-HCV therapy: a paired liver biopsy study. J HEPATOL. 2008;48(5):756-764. 5.

Bibtex

@article{ac136a6ca11c4f34926c6d67c57eeb7d,
title = "Hepatic steatosis in HIV/HCV co-infected patients: correlates, efficacy and outcomes of anti-HCV therapy: a paired liver biopsy study.",
abstract = "BACKGROUND/AIMS: Hepatic steatosis is caused by the complex interaction of host and viral factors, such as metabolic syndrome (MS), alcoholism and HCV genotype, and in HIV-HCV co-infected patients, antiretroviral therapy may also play a role. A large population of patients from the AIDS Pegasys Ribavirin International Co-infection Trial (APRICOT) had paired liver biopsies interpreted and graded for steatosis along with lipid measurements and anthropometric data. METHODS: We analyzed these patients to determine the prevalence of steatosis, baseline factors associated with steatosis, effect of steatosis in HCV therapy efficacy and the impact of anti-HCV treatment on steatosis. RESULTS: A total of 65/283 (23%) patients with paired biopsies were positive for steatosis. Patients with steatosis were significantly more likely to have HCV genotype 3, bridging fibrosis/cirrhosis, higher HCV RNA levels, increased triglycerides and lower cholesterol levels. The only different body measurement was neck circumference which was greater in patients with steatosis and significantly decreased from baseline during the study. Hip circumference was predictive of steatosis at baseline. CONCLUSIONS: Factors associated to the metabolic syndrome are important in co-infected patients. Treatment outcome affected steatosis in that viral eradication reduced steatosis in genotype 3 patients, but altogether steatosis did not affect efficacy of treatment in any genotype.",
author = "Maribel Rodr{\'i}guez-Torres and Sugantha Govindarajan and Ricard Sol{\'a} and Nathan Clumeck and Eduardo Lissen and M{\'a}rio Pess{\^o}a and Peter Buggisch and Janice Main and Jean Depamphilis and Dieterich, {Douglas T}",
year = "2008",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "48",
pages = "756--764",
journal = "J HEPATOL",
issn = "0168-8278",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Hepatic steatosis in HIV/HCV co-infected patients: correlates, efficacy and outcomes of anti-HCV therapy: a paired liver biopsy study.

AU - Rodríguez-Torres, Maribel

AU - Govindarajan, Sugantha

AU - Solá, Ricard

AU - Clumeck, Nathan

AU - Lissen, Eduardo

AU - Pessôa, Mário

AU - Buggisch, Peter

AU - Main, Janice

AU - Depamphilis, Jean

AU - Dieterich, Douglas T

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - BACKGROUND/AIMS: Hepatic steatosis is caused by the complex interaction of host and viral factors, such as metabolic syndrome (MS), alcoholism and HCV genotype, and in HIV-HCV co-infected patients, antiretroviral therapy may also play a role. A large population of patients from the AIDS Pegasys Ribavirin International Co-infection Trial (APRICOT) had paired liver biopsies interpreted and graded for steatosis along with lipid measurements and anthropometric data. METHODS: We analyzed these patients to determine the prevalence of steatosis, baseline factors associated with steatosis, effect of steatosis in HCV therapy efficacy and the impact of anti-HCV treatment on steatosis. RESULTS: A total of 65/283 (23%) patients with paired biopsies were positive for steatosis. Patients with steatosis were significantly more likely to have HCV genotype 3, bridging fibrosis/cirrhosis, higher HCV RNA levels, increased triglycerides and lower cholesterol levels. The only different body measurement was neck circumference which was greater in patients with steatosis and significantly decreased from baseline during the study. Hip circumference was predictive of steatosis at baseline. CONCLUSIONS: Factors associated to the metabolic syndrome are important in co-infected patients. Treatment outcome affected steatosis in that viral eradication reduced steatosis in genotype 3 patients, but altogether steatosis did not affect efficacy of treatment in any genotype.

AB - BACKGROUND/AIMS: Hepatic steatosis is caused by the complex interaction of host and viral factors, such as metabolic syndrome (MS), alcoholism and HCV genotype, and in HIV-HCV co-infected patients, antiretroviral therapy may also play a role. A large population of patients from the AIDS Pegasys Ribavirin International Co-infection Trial (APRICOT) had paired liver biopsies interpreted and graded for steatosis along with lipid measurements and anthropometric data. METHODS: We analyzed these patients to determine the prevalence of steatosis, baseline factors associated with steatosis, effect of steatosis in HCV therapy efficacy and the impact of anti-HCV treatment on steatosis. RESULTS: A total of 65/283 (23%) patients with paired biopsies were positive for steatosis. Patients with steatosis were significantly more likely to have HCV genotype 3, bridging fibrosis/cirrhosis, higher HCV RNA levels, increased triglycerides and lower cholesterol levels. The only different body measurement was neck circumference which was greater in patients with steatosis and significantly decreased from baseline during the study. Hip circumference was predictive of steatosis at baseline. CONCLUSIONS: Factors associated to the metabolic syndrome are important in co-infected patients. Treatment outcome affected steatosis in that viral eradication reduced steatosis in genotype 3 patients, but altogether steatosis did not affect efficacy of treatment in any genotype.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 48

SP - 756

EP - 764

JO - J HEPATOL

JF - J HEPATOL

SN - 0168-8278

IS - 5

M1 - 5

ER -