142 research outputs found

    Sex difference in the interaction of alcohol intake, hepatitis B virus, and hepatitis C virus on the risk of cirrhosis

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    Background The joint effect of the interaction of alcohol intake, hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) on the risk of cirrhosis is still unexplored because a large sample size is required for this investigation. Objective Evaluation of interaction of HBV, HCV and alcohol abuse on the risk of cirrhosis. Design We analysed 12,262 consecutive patients with chronic liver disease of various aetiologies referring to 95 Italian liver units in 2001 or 2014. To evaluate the interaction between alcohol abuse, HBV infection, and HCV infection, patients unexposed to either factors were used as reference category. Adjustment for BMI and age was done by multiple logistic regression analysis. Results Females were older than males (p<0.01) and less frequently showed HBV and alcoholic aetiology (p<0.01). In both sexes, an overtime increasing age and an increasing proportion of subjects with liver cirrhosis was observed, reflecting a better survival (0.01).An additive interaction is observed in females: the O.R. generated by the simultaneous presence of HBV, HCV, and alcohol (5.09; 95% C.I. 1.06–24.56) exceeds the sum (4.14) of the O.R. generated by a single exposure (O.R. = 0.72 for HBsAg positivity, OR = 1.34 for antiHCV positivity, and O.R. = 2.08 for alcohol intake). No interaction is observed in male sex. Conclusions The observed gender difference suggests that the simultaneous presence of HBV/HCV coinfection and risky alcohol intake enhances the mechanism of liver damage to a greater extent in females than in males

    Changes in inflammatory biomarkers in HCV-infected patients undergoing direct acting antiviral-containing regimens with or without interferon

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    Background and aims Increased levels of chemokine interferon-gamma (IFN-γ)-inducible protein-10 (CXCL10), soluble CD163 (sCD163) and soluble CD14 (sCD14) have been reported in HCV infection. The aim of this study was to compare, sCD163 and sCD14 levels in HCV-infected patients undergoing direct acting antiviral (DAA)-containing regimens with or without interferon (IFN). Methods sCD163, sCD14 and CXCL10 were longitudinally measured by ELISA in 159 plasma samples from 25 HCV-infected patients undergoing IFN-based treatment plus telaprevir or boceprevir and 28 HCV infected subjects treated with DAA IFN-free regimens. Twenty-five healthy donors (HD) were included as controls. Results At baseline CXCL10, sCD163 and sCD14 levels were higher in HCV-infected patients than in HD. CXCL10 and sCD163 levels were significantly decreased in responder (R) patients who achieved sustained virological response (SVR), with both IFN-based and IFN-free regimens, while they were persistently elevated in non-responders (NR) patients who stopped IFN-based treatments because of failure or adverse events. Conversely, sCD14 levels were apparently unchanged during therapy, but at the end of treatment the levels reached normal ranges. Comparing the two regimens, the extent of CXCL10 reduction was more pronounced in patients undergoing DAA IFN-free therapies, whereas sCD163 and sCD14 reduction was similar in the two groups. Interestingly, only in IFN-based regimens baseline sCD163 levels were significantly higher in NR than in R patients, while in the IFN-free treatment group also patients with highsCD163 plasma levels obtained SVR. At the end of therapy, even if the biomarkers were largely decreased, their levels remained significantly higher compared to HD. Only in the early fibrosis stages, sCD163 values tended to normalize. Conclusions These results indicate that IFN-free regimens including newer DAA induce an early and marked decrease in circulating inflammatory biomarkers. However, the full normalization of biomarkers was not obtained, especially in patients with advanced fibrosis, thus underlying the need for a treatment in the early stages of HCV infection

    Gender differences in chronic liver diseases in two cohorts of 2001 and 2014 in Italy

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    Background: Gender differences in chronic liver disease (CLD) have been partially investigated. To extend the present knowledge, we evaluated 12,263 patients with CLD enrolled in two national surveys (9997 in 2001 and 2557 in 2014). Methods: The two surveys prospectively recruited patients aged â¥Â 18 referring to Italian liver units throughout the country using a similar clinical approach and analytical methods. Results: The overall male to female ratio (M/F) was 1.4 (7138/5124). Compared with females, males were significantly more likely to be younger (52.9 vs. 58.7 yrs.), with HBV infection alone (13.2% vs. 9.2%) and with alcoholic liver disease alone (11.4% vs. 6.9%), but less likely to show HCV infection alone (48.0% vs. 67.9%). A male preponderance was observed in HBV-related cases (1.99) and in alcoholic-related cases (2.3), a preponderance observed both in the 2001 and in 2014 cases. In HCV-related cases, however, females predominated in 2001 (M/F 0.9) and males in 2014 (M/F 1.5).The rate of cirrhosis in alcohol-related etiology was close to 36% in both genders, a finding much higher than that observed for both sexes in HBV and HCV etiologies.Both males and females enrolled in 2014 were older (p < 0.001) and with a higher rate of cirrhosis and/or HCC (p < 0.001) than those investigated in 2001. There was a remarkable increase over time in the proportion of male abstainers (36.7% in 2001 and 64.3% in 2014). Conclusion: This study highlights important inter- and intra-gender differences in the characteristics and etiological factors of patients with CLD in Italy

    Microvascular pericytes involvement in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis

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    In the CNS, pericytes are microvessel wall-encircling cells that, together with endothelial cells, perivascular glial endfeet and basement membrane, form the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Dysfunction of the BBB and migration of autoreactive T lymphocytes into the CNS are histopathological hallmarks of both Multiple Sclerosis (MS), a chronic demyelinating disease, and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), a widely used MS animal model. The proteoglycan NG2, which has been described to accumulate within MS plaques and at spinal cord (SC) injury sites, is a primary component of pericytes, engaged in pericyte/endothelial cell interaction, proliferation and migration. To explore the role of NG2-expressing pericytes during neuroinflammation and BBB dysfunction, pericyte coverage (pericyte number/vessel length) and density (pericyte number/tissue volume) ratios were studied in brain microvessels by immunohistochemistry and laser confocal microscopy using specific pericyte markers, NG2, RGS5, and CD13. The observations were made in mice affected by MOG-induced chronic EAE with two different genetic C57BL/6 backgrounds: wild type (WT) and homozygous NG2 null (NG2-/-). In literature, NG2-/- mice did not exhibit gross phenotypic or vascular alterations, whereas our results demonstrated an unaltered pericyte density associated with slightly decreased pericyte coverage index and pericyte/endothelial cell ratio. These observations were confirmed in NG2-/- EAE-affected mice, that showed an attenuated disease severity and demyelination, and a milder BBB leakage and leukocyte infiltration, as compared with EAE WT. Taken together these results lend support to the idea of a direct involvement of NG2 proteoglycan in pericyte-endothelial cell interactions essential for the preservation of a proper BBB function

    Tight junction protein changes in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis models

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    Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), an animal model of human multiple sclerosis (MS), is characterized by vascular changes, particularly endothelial tight junction (TJ) protein (claudin-5 and occludin) alterations. During blood-brain barrier function, the vascular wall components, endothelial cells, pericytes and perivascular astrocytes, engage in crosstalks through cell-associated molecules and soluble factors. Pericyte-associated NG2 is a large transmembrane proteoglycan participating in these interactions, as well as in the control of pericyte proliferation and migration. We have analyzed the role of NG2 on endothelial TJ arrangement in two groups of mice, wild type (WT) and homozygous NG2 null (NG2-/-), affected by MOG-induced EAE. Expression and distribution of the TJ transmembrane proteins claudin-5 and occludin were analyzed in the cerebral cortex microvessels by immunohistochemistry and laser confocal microscopy. In NG2-/-mice, most cortex vessels showed an altered, chain-like claudin-5 staining pattern with aggregates distributed irregularly along the junctional membranes. Unlike the claudin-5 changes, the occludin staining pattern appeared continuous and linear and only a few cortex microvessels showed protein clustering. These TJ protein expression results in NG2-/- mice affected by EAE were compared with our previous results on WT EAE mice sacrificed at 39 days post immunization. In WT EAE both claudin-5 and occludin appeared severely damaged but occludin changes were related to more severe disease stages. Interestingly, in NG2-/- EAE-affected mice, claudin-5 and occludin formed an apparently unaffected linear and continuous junctional staining, suggesting a compensation of TJ damage, with cerebral cortex microvessels showing a restored claudin-5 and occludin junctional pattern. Overall, these observations suggest that absence of NG2 in the brain microvessels of naïve NG2 null mice may affect the normal arrangement of TJ proteins, whereas under inflammatory stimuli these effects seem to be partly reversed

    Long term nucleotide and nucleoside analogs treatment in chronic hepatitis B HBeAg negative genotype D patients and risk for hepatocellular carcinoma

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    Background and rationale of the study. Effect of Long-term nucleoside/nucleotide (NUC) on hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) incidence in a population of HBeAg-negative genotype D patients has not been adequately studied in real-life cohorts. Our aim was to evaluate the impact of liver fibrosis and other variables on HCC incidence in this population of patients. Of 745 patients with chronic hepatitis B (CHB), 306 HBeAg-negative genotype D were selected and included in this study. All patients received treatment with NUC for at least 18 months. Patients with CHB or compensated cirrhosis were included. Patients with HCC diagnosed before or during the first 18 months of NUC therapy were excluded. Results. HCC was diagnosed in 2 CHB patients (1.0%) and 23 cirrhosis patients (20%) (OR = 24.41, 95% CI 5.40 < OR < 153.2; p < 0.0001). Multivariate analysis revealed that HCC risk was independently associated with age ≥ 60 years (OR = 6.45, 95% CI 1.22 to 34.0; p = 0.02) and liver cirrhosis (OR = 12.1, 95% CI 1.39 to 106.2; p = 0.02), but not with virological response (VR), and previous resistance to NUC, or rescue therapy. Multivariate analysis in cirrhosis patients revealed that only age ≥ 60 years was an independent risk factor associated with HCC (p = 0.003). Conclusions. Liver cirrhosis and age ≥ 60 years are the stronger risk factors for HCC in genotype D HBeAgnegative patients. Previous resistance to NUC in patients that achieved a VR after rescue therapy was not a predictive factor regarding HCC. VR does not appear to significantly reduce the overall incidence of HCC when a patient has already progressed to liver cirrhosis

    SARS-CoV-2 serology after COVID-19 in multiple sclerosis: An international cohort study

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    COVID-19 Severity in Multiple Sclerosis: Putting Data Into Context

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    Background and objectives: It is unclear how multiple sclerosis (MS) affects the severity of COVID-19. The aim of this study is to compare COVID-19-related outcomes collected in an Italian cohort of patients with MS with the outcomes expected in the age- and sex-matched Italian population. Methods: Hospitalization, intensive care unit (ICU) admission, and death after COVID-19 diagnosis of 1,362 patients with MS were compared with the age- and sex-matched Italian population in a retrospective observational case-cohort study with population-based control. The observed vs the expected events were compared in the whole MS cohort and in different subgroups (higher risk: Expanded Disability Status Scale [EDSS] score &gt; 3 or at least 1 comorbidity, lower risk: EDSS score ≤ 3 and no comorbidities) by the χ2 test, and the risk excess was quantified by risk ratios (RRs). Results: The risk of severe events was about twice the risk in the age- and sex-matched Italian population: RR = 2.12 for hospitalization (p &lt; 0.001), RR = 2.19 for ICU admission (p &lt; 0.001), and RR = 2.43 for death (p &lt; 0.001). The excess of risk was confined to the higher-risk group (n = 553). In lower-risk patients (n = 809), the rate of events was close to that of the Italian age- and sex-matched population (RR = 1.12 for hospitalization, RR = 1.52 for ICU admission, and RR = 1.19 for death). In the lower-risk group, an increased hospitalization risk was detected in patients on anti-CD20 (RR = 3.03, p = 0.005), whereas a decrease was detected in patients on interferon (0 observed vs 4 expected events, p = 0.04). Discussion: Overall, the MS cohort had a risk of severe events that is twice the risk than the age- and sex-matched Italian population. This excess of risk is mainly explained by the EDSS score and comorbidities, whereas a residual increase of hospitalization risk was observed in patients on anti-CD20 therapies and a decrease in people on interferon
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