National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, Bethesda, MD, USA.
Hepatology. 2013 May;57(5):1725-33. doi: 10.1002/hep.26203. Epub 2013 Apr 5.
Increased γ-glutamyl transferase (GGT) activity is associated with liver injury and with mortality in the general population. Less is known about its association with chronic hepatitis C (HCV) outcomes. We examined GGT as a predictor of both virological response to treatment and long-term clinical outcomes in the Hepatitis C Anti-viral Treatment Against Cirrhosis Trial (HALT-C). HALT-C enrolled patients with advanced liver disease (Ishak fibrosis score ≥3) in two phases: a lead-in to establish lack of sustained viral response with full dose pegylated interferon (IFN) and ribavirin followed by a 3.5-year randomized trial with low-dose IFN. Low-dose IFN did not prevent liver disease progression, and patients were then followed for up to an additional 5 years off therapy. Analyses were performed for 1,319 patients who had GGT measured prior to initiation of treatment. Increases in risk with each increase in quintile of GGT (10-57, 58-89, 90-139, 140-230, 231-2,000 IU/L) were determined by logistic regression for treatment response or Cox regression for clinical outcomes. Baseline GGT was associated with male sex, nonwhite ethnicity, diabetes and insulin resistance, interleukin (IL)28B rs12979860 CT and TT genotypes, and numerous markers of liver disease injury and severity. In the lead-in phase, increasing GGT was strongly associated with diminished week 20 response, end of treatment response, and sustained virological response in both univariate and multivariate analyses controlling for factors known to be associated with treatment response (P < 0.0001). GGT was also associated with all clinical outcomes in univariate and multivariate analysis (P < 0.05) except for hepatocellular carcinoma (P = 0.46 in multivariate analysis).
GGT is an independent predictor of both virological response and clinical outcomes among patients with advanced liver disease due to HCV.
γ-谷氨酰转移酶(GGT)活性升高与肝损伤和普通人群死亡率相关。关于其与慢性丙型肝炎(HCV)结局的关系知之甚少。我们研究了 GGT 在丙型肝炎抗病毒治疗肝硬化试验(HALT-C)中作为治疗病毒学应答和长期临床结局预测因子的作用。HALT-C 将患有晚期肝病(Ishak 纤维化评分≥3)的患者分两期入组:先导期用全剂量聚乙二醇干扰素(IFN)和利巴韦林治疗,以确定无持续病毒应答,然后进行为期 3.5 年的低剂量 IFN 随机试验。低剂量 IFN 未能阻止肝病进展,然后患者在停药后最多再随访 5 年。对 1319 名治疗前测量过 GGT 的患者进行了分析。通过逻辑回归确定每个 GGT 五分位数(10-57、58-89、90-139、140-230、231-2000IU/L)升高的风险,采用 Cox 回归分析临床结局。基线 GGT 与男性、非白种人、糖尿病和胰岛素抵抗、白细胞介素(IL)28B rs12979860 CT 和 TT 基因型以及许多肝脏疾病损伤和严重程度的标志物相关。在先导期,GGT 升高与未经调整和多变量分析中(控制已知与治疗反应相关的因素后)第 20 周应答、治疗结束时应答和持续病毒学应答均显著相关(P<0.0001)。GGT 在单变量和多变量分析中与所有临床结局均相关(P<0.05),除肝细胞癌外(多变量分析中 P=0.46)。
在患有 HCV 引起的晚期肝病的患者中,GGT 是病毒学应答和临床结局的独立预测因子。