AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the impact of metabolic and cardiovascular diseases on liver disease progression in chronic hepatitis B (CHB) patients, revealing a significant rise in liver cirrhosis and related events in those with these comorbidities.
  • A retrospective analysis of 602 CHB patients showed that those with diabetes, obesity, hypertension, or coronary heart disease had higher rates of cirrhosis and liver-related incidents during a median follow-up of 2.51 years.
  • The findings highlight that hepatitis B patients with metabolic disorders, particularly diabetes, require closer monitoring and tailored treatment strategies due to their increased risk of severe liver complications.

Article Abstract

Background: The prevalence of metabolic and cardiovascular diseases is rising worldwide. However, little is known about the impact of such disorders on hepatic disease progression in chronic hepatitis B (CHB) during the era of potent nucleo(s)tide analogues (NAs).

Methods: We retrospectively analyzed a single-center cohort of 602 CHB patients, comparing the frequency of liver cirrhosis at baseline and incidences of liver-related events during follow-up (hepatocellular carcinoma, liver transplantation and liver-related death) between CHB patients with a history of diabetes, obesity, hypertension or coronary heart disease (CHD).

Results: Rates of cirrhosis at baseline and liver-related events during follow-up (median follow-up time: 2.51 years; NA-treated: 37%) were substantially higher in CHB patients with diabetes (11/23; 3/23), obesity (6/13; 2/13), CHD (7/11; 2/11) or hypertension (15/43; 4/43) compared to CHB patients without the indicated comorbidities (26/509; 6/509). Multivariate analysis identified diabetes as the most significant predictor for cirrhosis ( = 0.0105), while comorbidities did not correlate with liver-related events in pre-existing cirrhosis.

Conclusion: The combination of metabolic diseases and CHB is associated with substantially increased rates of liver cirrhosis and secondary liver-related events compared to CHB alone, indicating that hepatitis B patients with metabolic comorbidities warrant particular attention in disease surveillance and evaluation of treatment indication.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8146494PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9050968DOI Listing

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