Whether hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection-associated risk of rheumatic diseases is reversed by anti-HCV therapy remain elusive. A nationwide population-based cohort study of the Taiwan National Health Insurance Research Database was conducted. Of 19,298,735 subjects, 3 cohorts (1:4:4, propensity score-matched), including HCV-treated (6919 HCV-infected subjects with interferon and ribavirin therapy ≥ 6 months), HCV-untreated ( = 27,676) and HCV-uninfected ( = 27,676) cohorts, were enrolled and followed (2003-2015). The HCV-uninfected cohort had the lowest cumulative incidence of rheumatic diseases (95% confidence interval (CI): 8.416-10.734%), while HCV-treated (12.417-17.704%) and HCV-untreated (13.585-16.479%) cohorts showed no difference in the cumulative incidences. Multivariate analyses showed that HCV infection (95% CI hazard ratio (HR): 1.54-1.765), female sex (1.57-1.789), age ≥ 49 years (1.091-1.257), Charlson comorbidity index ≥ 1 (1.075-1.245), liver cirrhosis (0.655-0.916), chronic obstruction pulmonary disease (1.130-1.360), end-stage renal disease (0.553-0.98), diabetes mellitus (0.834-0.991) and dyslipidemia (1.102-1.304) were associated with incident rheumatic diseases. Among the 3 cohorts, the untreated cohort had the highest cumulative incidence of overall mortality, while the treated and un-infected cohorts had indifferent mortalities. Conclusions: HCV infection, baseline demographics and comorbidities were associated with rheumatic diseases. Although HCV-associated risk of rheumatic diseases might not be reversed by interferon-based therapy, which reduced the overall mortality in HCV-infected patients.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7922671 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm10040817 | DOI Listing |
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