Factor V Leiden polymorphism and the rate of fibrosis development in chronic hepatitis C virus infection
Factor V Leiden polymorphism and the rate of fibrosis development in chronic hepatitis C virus infection
Background: the rate of progression to cirrhosis varies among individuals chronically infected with the hepatitis C virus (HCV). Coagulation pathway activation in models of hepatic fibrosis suggests variation in coagulation pathway components may influence the rate of fibrosis. We hypothesised that polymorphisms of the coagulation factors II and V affect the rate of progression to cirrhosis in HCV infected subjects.
Methods: we studied the relationship between rate of fibrosis (calculated by dividing the fibrosis stage by duration of infection) and genotypes of specific coagulation pathway genes in 352 White European patients infected with HCV. Genotyping was performed using reverse line blot hybridisation.
Results: the rate of fibrosis was significantly higher in patients with the factor V Leiden genotype (Arg560Gln) (ANOVA, p=0.004). In disease association studies, a significant association was seen (Fisher's exact test, p=0.029; odds ratio 3.28 for fast progression to cirrhosis (expected to reach cirrhosis in less than 30 years) if heterozygous for factor V Leiden). No associations were seen between factor II genotype and fibrosis rate.
Conclusions: possession of the factor V Leiden polymorphism significantly increases the risk of rapid disease progression in HCV, suggesting a role for the coagulation system in the pathogenesis of fibrotic liver disease.
Adult, Disease Progression, Factor V/genetics, Female, Genotype, Hepatitis C, Chronic/complications, Humans, Liver Cirrhosis/genetics, Male, Multivariate Analysis, Polymorphism, Genetic/genetics, Sensitivity and Specificity
1206-10
Wright, M.
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Goldin, R.
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Hellier, S.
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Knapp, S.
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Frodsham, A.
d4446b45-0df1-403d-b42f-f2ee341fad4b
Hennig, B.
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Hill, A.
fc5f6d0f-7478-4759-8abe-34aba28f951b
Apple, R.
b688144e-9f64-4a4d-9c8b-ab357aaefeed
Cheng, S.
ff55652e-64de-4c56-9c5a-f59657324f9f
Thomas, H.
a5cd108c-a73e-47fc-8832-0c2c3f313199
Thursz, M.
2c345793-0ae5-4a81-b663-6c47236e2a73
Wright, M.
43325ef9-3459-4c75-b3bf-cf8d8dac2a21
Goldin, R.
1f267db3-8a82-4be7-aa28-6141ee2ba92c
Hellier, S.
7698887c-29e4-4afc-9b97-1b5c067c4c04
Knapp, S.
b7e3f8e9-0b4b-4433-8077-d6e3fbf4ccee
Frodsham, A.
d4446b45-0df1-403d-b42f-f2ee341fad4b
Hennig, B.
5ca2747d-87cd-4d2f-9853-f0c25dcfaf63
Hill, A.
fc5f6d0f-7478-4759-8abe-34aba28f951b
Apple, R.
b688144e-9f64-4a4d-9c8b-ab357aaefeed
Cheng, S.
ff55652e-64de-4c56-9c5a-f59657324f9f
Thomas, H.
a5cd108c-a73e-47fc-8832-0c2c3f313199
Thursz, M.
2c345793-0ae5-4a81-b663-6c47236e2a73
Wright, M., Goldin, R., Hellier, S., Knapp, S., Frodsham, A., Hennig, B., Hill, A., Apple, R., Cheng, S., Thomas, H. and Thursz, M.
(2003)
Factor V Leiden polymorphism and the rate of fibrosis development in chronic hepatitis C virus infection.
Gut, 52 (8), .
(doi:10.1136/gut.52.8.1206).
Abstract
Background: the rate of progression to cirrhosis varies among individuals chronically infected with the hepatitis C virus (HCV). Coagulation pathway activation in models of hepatic fibrosis suggests variation in coagulation pathway components may influence the rate of fibrosis. We hypothesised that polymorphisms of the coagulation factors II and V affect the rate of progression to cirrhosis in HCV infected subjects.
Methods: we studied the relationship between rate of fibrosis (calculated by dividing the fibrosis stage by duration of infection) and genotypes of specific coagulation pathway genes in 352 White European patients infected with HCV. Genotyping was performed using reverse line blot hybridisation.
Results: the rate of fibrosis was significantly higher in patients with the factor V Leiden genotype (Arg560Gln) (ANOVA, p=0.004). In disease association studies, a significant association was seen (Fisher's exact test, p=0.029; odds ratio 3.28 for fast progression to cirrhosis (expected to reach cirrhosis in less than 30 years) if heterozygous for factor V Leiden). No associations were seen between factor II genotype and fibrosis rate.
Conclusions: possession of the factor V Leiden polymorphism significantly increases the risk of rapid disease progression in HCV, suggesting a role for the coagulation system in the pathogenesis of fibrotic liver disease.
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 20 February 2003
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 July 2003
Keywords:
Adult, Disease Progression, Factor V/genetics, Female, Genotype, Hepatitis C, Chronic/complications, Humans, Liver Cirrhosis/genetics, Male, Multivariate Analysis, Polymorphism, Genetic/genetics, Sensitivity and Specificity
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 40697
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/40697
ISSN: 0017-5749
PURE UUID: 286201da-6252-433b-9f13-3027abcf6ecb
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Date deposited: 07 Jul 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 08:21
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Contributors
Author:
M. Wright
Author:
R. Goldin
Author:
S. Hellier
Author:
S. Knapp
Author:
A. Frodsham
Author:
B. Hennig
Author:
A. Hill
Author:
R. Apple
Author:
S. Cheng
Author:
H. Thomas
Author:
M. Thursz
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