Hepatitis C Virus Infection: Evidence for an Association With Type 2 Diabetes

Response to Skowroński et al.

  1. Alessandro Antonelli, MD1,
  2. Clodoveo Ferri, MD2,
  3. Poupak Fallahi, MD1,
  4. Silvia Martina Ferrar1,
  5. Fernando Goglia, PHD3 and
  6. Ele Ferrannini, MD1
  1. 1Metabolism Unit, Department of Internal Medicine and CNR Institute of Clinical Physiology, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy
  2. 2Rheumatology Unit, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Modena, Modena, Italy
  3. 3Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Sannio, Benevento, Italy
  1. Address correspondence to Alessandro Antonelli, MD, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Pisa, School of Medicine, Via Roma, 67, I-56100, Pisa, Italy. E-mail: a.antonelli{at}med.unipi.it

We agree with Skowroński et al. (1) that the type of diabetes manifested by patients with HCV chronic infection (HCV+) may not be classical type 2 diabetes, and the phenotypic characterization of our patients shows just that. The labeling of HCV+ patients as type 2 diabetes is purely conventional and possibly inaccurate: the lines separating type 1 diabetes, from latent autoimmune diabetes in adults and from type 2 diabetes, are fading away as new pathogenetic information is obtained (2).

HCV chronic infection may be responsible for a constellation of extrahepatic immune-mediated manifestations (3). HCV lymphotropism may trigger lymphocyte expansion followed by the production of different autoantibodies (3). For example, we have previously reported (4) on 229 HCV-related mixed cryoglobulinemia (MC-HCV+) patients without cirrhosis. We found that 1) the prevalence of type 2 diabetes was significantly higher in MC-HCV+ patients without cirrhosis than in control subjects (14.4 vs. 6.9%), 2) MC-HCV+ patients with type 2 diabetes were leaner than type 2 diabetic control subjects (24.2 vs. 30.4 kg/m2) and showed significantly lower LDL cholesterol and systolic and diastolic blood pressure, and 3) MC-HCV+ patients with type 2 diabetes had non–organ-specific autoantibodies more frequently (34 vs. 18%) than nondiabetic MC-HCV+ patients. Thus, in HCV chronic infection, the clinical phenotype of diabetes has been found to be similar across three studies (1,4,5) and different from classical type 2 diabetes. An immune-mediated mechanism for MC-HCV+–associated diabetes has been postulated (4), and a similar pathogenesis might be involved in the diabetes of HCV+ patients. This hypothesis is strengthened by the finding that autoimmune phenomena in type 2 diabetic patients are more common than previously thought (6). Since the prevalence of classic β-cell autoimmune markers in HCV+ patients has not been found to be increased (1), other immune phenomena might be involved, and viral damage to the β-cells may occur by a direct mechanism (7).

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