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370380

Inadequate serum hepcidin levels in chronic hepatitis C infection-induced type 2 diabetes mellitus

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Last updated: 21 Dec 2024

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Abstract

Background
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major cause of chronic liver disease worldwide. In addition to established liver injury, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is one of the most important extrahepatic metabolic disorders that are attributed to HCV infection.
Aim
The aim of this study is to investigate the impact of HCV infection in the development of T2DM through the assessment of serum hepcidin levels.
Patients and methods
The study included 60 Egyptian patients with chronic HCV infection who were divided according to the presence and absence of diabetes into two groups: 30 HCV-positive patients who developed diabetes mellitus during the course of HCV infection (HCV-T2DM patients) and 30 HCV-positive patients without T2DM (HCV patients) and 20 healthy individuals as a control group (age and sex matched). They were subjected to a full assessment of medical history, clinical examination, abdominal ultrasound, and laboratory investigations including complete blood count, liver function tests, fasting blood sugar (FBS), glycosylated hemoglobin, fasting insulin, serum hepcidin, serum ferritin, serum iron, and transferrin saturation. Serum hepcidin, ferritin, and insulin were measured using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.
Results
We found that serum hepcidin was statistically significantly lower in HCV patients than in controls (<0.0001). Also, serum hepcidin in HCV-T2DM patients was statistically significantly lower than that in HCV-positive patients (<0.05). Serum ferritin was statistically significantly higher in HCV-positive patients than in controls (<0.0001). Also, serum ferritin was statistically significantly higher in HCV-T2DM patients than in HCV patients (<0.0001). Serum iron and serum transferrin saturation were statistically significantly higher in HCV-T2DM patients than HCV-positive patients (<0.0001 and <0.0001, respectively). There was a statistically significant increase in fasting blood glucose, glycosylated hemoglobin, and fasting insulin in HCV-T2DM patients compared with HCV nondiabetic patients (<0.0001 for all). Also, we found that the serum albumin was statistically significantly lower in HCV-T2DM patients compared with HCV-positive patients (<0.0001).
Conclusion
HCV infection is associated with a decreased level of hepcidin in relation to body iron store, which plays a crucial role in the development of T2DM in chronic HCV infection patients.

DOI

10.4103/sjamf.sjamf_59_18

Keywords

Chronic hepatitis C virus, serum ferritin, serum hepcidin, serum iron, transferrin, Type 2 diabetes mellitus

Authors

First Name

Samia T.

Last Name

Ali

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First Name

Nagwa A.

Last Name

Mohamed

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Volume

3

Article Issue

1

Related Issue

49514

Issue Date

2019-01-01

Receive Date

2018-11-05

Publish Date

2019-01-01

Page Start

91

Page End

96

Print ISSN

1110-2381

Link

https://sjamf.journals.ekb.eg/article_370380.html

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https://sjamf.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=370380

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370,380

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

The Scientific Journal of Al-Azhar Medical Faculty, Girls

Publication Link

https://sjamf.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Inadequate serum hepcidin levels in chronic hepatitis C infection-induced type 2 diabetes mellitus

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Article

Created At

21 Dec 2024