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Risk of Cardiovascular Disease Due to Chronic Hepatitis C Infection: A Review

  • Ahmed Babiker1,
  • Jean Jeudy#,4,
  • Seth Kligerman#,4,
  • Miriam Khambaty2,3,
  • Anoop Shah5 and
  • Shashwatee Bagchi*,2,3
 Author information  Cite
Journal of Clinical and Translational Hepatology   2017;5(4):343-362

doi: 10.14218/JCTH.2017.00021

Abstract

Hepatitis C (HCV) infection has an estimated global prevalence of 2.5%, causing chronic liver disease in 170 million people worldwide. Recent data has identified HCV infection as a risk factor for subclinical and clinical cardiovascular disease (CVD), but these data have been mixed and whether HCV is an independent risk factor for development of CVD remains controversial. In this review, we present the literature regarding the association of HCV with subclinical and clinical CVD and the possible underlying mechanisms leading to increased CVD among those infected with HCV. HCV infection leads to increased CVD via direct and indirect mechanisms with chronic inflammation, endothelial dysfunction and direct invasion of the arterial wall cited as possible mechanisms. Our review showed that HCV infection, particularly chronic HCV infection, appears to lead to increased subclinical CVD most consistently and potentially also to increased clinical CVD outcomes, leading to increased morbidity and mortality. Furthermore, the majority of studies evaluating the impact of HCV therapy on CVD morbidity and mortality showed an improvement in subclinical and clinical CVD endpoints in patients who were successfully treated and achieved sustained viral suppression. These results are of particular interest following the development of new direct antiviral agents which have made HCV eradication simple and feasible for many more patients globally, and in doing so may possibly reduce CVD morbidity and mortality in those with chronic HCV infection.

Keywords

Hepatitis C, Cardiovascular disease, Coronary heart disease, Atherosclerosis, Cerebrovascular disease

Introduction

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a single-stranded RNA virus belonging to the Flaviviridae family.1 HCV infection has an estimated global prevalence of 2.5%, causing chronic liver disease in 170 million people worldwide, and is the leading cause of progressive liver fibrosis, resulting in cirrhosis, liver cancer, liver failure and death.2,3 Chronic HCV (CHC) infection progresses slowly for most individuals, and patients often remain asymptomatic for decades until they develop clinically apparent liver disease resulting in delayed diagnosis. In addition to liver disease, CHC infection has been associated with many extrahepatic comorbidities, including cryoglobulinemia, lymphoproliferative disease, renal disease, cardiovascular disease (CVD), diabetes mellitus (DM) and insulin resistance.4,5 Recently, HCV treatment has been transformed by the availability of oral, once-daily, and well-tolerated direct-acting antiviral agents (DAAs), which achieve >90% sustained viral response (SVR) rates (SVR defined as an undetectable HCV RNA level 12 weeks after completing HCV treatment) among CHC patients.

Recent data has identified HCV infection as a risk factor for subclinical and clinical CVD. However, results of these studies are mixed and whether HCV is an independent risk factor for development of CVD remains controversial.6–8 In this review, we present the literature regarding the association of HCV with subclinical and clinical CVD and the possible underlying mechanisms leading to increased CVD among those infected with HCV.

Methodology

We searched PubMed for English language articles published between January 1, 1995 through December 31, 2016 using the following keywords: “hepatitis C, hepatitis C virus, hepatitis non-A non-B, HCV, cardiovascular disease, cardiac outcomes, carotid atherosclerosis, intima-media thickness, cerebrovascular disease, stroke, cardiovascular outcomes, myocardial infarction, peripheral arterial disease (and its abbreviation PAD), and coronary artery disease. A total of 553 references were found, and of those 499 references were not selected because they were abstracts, poster presentations, correspondences or other report types, or were deemed not relevant to the scope of this review upon reading their abstracts. An additional 37 articles were added after performing ancestry and bibliography searches of all relevant articles, meta-analyses, systematic reviews, and narrative reviews on HCV and CVD. Ultimately, 91 full-length articles were reviewed. Study designs included randomized clinical trials, prospective cohorts, retrospective analyses, case-control studies, cross-sectional studies and meta-analysis.

We have presented the data from our literature review by first reporting studies that investigated possible pathogenic mechanisms of HCV on CVD in order to understand the plausible biological basis for findings reported subsequently, then presenting studies that investigated the effect of HCV infection on both subclinical and clinical outcomes of CVD, and finally presenting studies that assessed HCV infection on the myocardium. Subclinical CVD was defined as evidence of atherosclerotic disease using a surrogate measure of atherosclerosis (such as with carotid intima media thickness (CIMT), flow-mediated dilation (FMD) and pulse wave velocity (PWV)) whereas clinical CVD was defined as any clinical CVD event (such as coronary artery disease (CAD), myocardial infarction (MI), unstable antigen (UA), cerebrovascular accident (CVA), transient ischemic attack (TIA), PAD, and congestive heart failure (CHF)) (Fig. 1).

Flowchart.
Fig. 1.  Flowchart.

Abbreviations: AMI, acute myocardial infarction; CAD, coronary artery disease; CVA, cerebrovascular accident; CVD, cardiovascular disease; DCM, dilated cardiomyopathy; HCM, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy; IHD, ischemic heart disease; IMT, intima media thickness; FMD, flow-mediated dilation; MI, myocardial infarction; PAD, peripheral arterial disease; PWV, pulse wave velocity; UA, unstable angina.

Pathogenesis

The role of infectious agents in the development of atherosclerotic disease was first described over a century ago.9 Chronic infection with certain organisms is believed to promote the atherogenic process by inducing a systemic inflammatory state.10

HCV infection interferes with glucose and lipid metabolism, resulting in a high prevalence of insulin resistance (IR), steatosis and type 2 diabetes, which are directly associated to atherosclerosis development. However, current literature suggests that HCV infection leads to increased CVD via direct and indirect mechanisms beyond these metabolic pathways (Fig. 2). Chronic inflammation, endothelial dysfunction and direct invasion of the arterial wall have also been cited as possible mechanisms.8

Mechanism of HCV-induced CVD.
Fig. 2.  Mechanism of HCV-induced CVD.

CHC infection has been shown to result in chronic immune stimulation and increased inflammation associated with increased levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines, such as interleukin (IL)-6, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α, C-reactive protein (CRP) and fibrinogen, which have all been associated with increased CVD.11–15 Adinolfi et al.16 demonstrated that the increase in pro-inflammatory cytokines among HCV patients was associated with a significantly higher prevalence of carotid atherosclerosis in HCV-infected patients compared to controls (53.7% vs. 34.3%, p > 0.0001) after adjusting for presence of steatosis (77.7% vs. 57.8%, p = 0.0001). In addition, the study reported a significant association between HCV RNA level and elevated levels of serum fibrinogen and CRP, suggesting a pro-inflammatory state as the underlying mechanism independent of steatosis.

HCV treatment resulted in reduction of inflammatory markers and improvement in surrogate measures of endothelial function, supporting the link between CHC infection, inflammation, and endothelial dysfunction. Chew et al.17 demonstrated that HCV-infected patients who achieved SVR following treatment had decreased levels of SICAM-1 (a non-hepatically produced marker of endothelial dysfunction and inflammation) and sCD163 (a marker of monocyte/macrophage activation associated with the presence or burden of atherosclerotic plaque and arterial wall inflammation). In a case control study, Pateria et al.18 demonstrated improvement in vascular stiffness assessed by carotid PWV in HCV-infected patients who underwent treatment and achieved SVR (PWV 7.4 ± 1.1 m/s vs. 6.5 ± 0.6 m/s, p = 0.04).

HCV has been isolated from carotid plaque tissue and endothelial tissue of brain autopsy specimens taken from HCV-infected patients.19–21 Additionally, HCV RNA has been demonstrated in the myocardium of patients with myocarditis and cardiomyopathy.22,23 These interesting findings suggest a possible role for direct HCV infection in vascular and cardiac tissue, but these findings need to be reproduced in larger studies.

Not only is there an association between the presence of HCV and CVD but there also seems to be a causal link between the burden of HCV infection (as demonstrated by viral load or liver disease) and CVD risk. The pro-inflammatory state resulting from HCV infection which leads to increased CVD also promotes a pro-fibrogenic environment leading to hepatic steatosis and fibrosis.24 Petta et al.25 reported that the severity of hepatic fibrosis is directly linked to number of plaques. Adinolfi et al.24 reported that viral load and hepatic steatosis were independently associated with atherosclerosis, and Maruyama et al.26 found that patients with higher viral load and histology activity index had higher degrees of myocardial injury. Hence, increased HCV disease burden as measured by numerous indices (HCV viral load, hepatic steatosis, hepatic fibrosis) may cause patients with CHC to be more likely to develop HCV-associated CVD.

HCV and subclinical CVD

Several functional and anatomical surrogate markers of subclinical CVD have been investigated in HCV-infected populations to assist in predicting CVD events (Table 1). Subclinical CVD was defined as atherosclerotic disease as measured by CIMT, FMD or PWV. CIMT is a well-validated method of detecting subclinical atherosclerosis, and increased CIMT is associated with CVD risk factors, coronary atherosclerosis and CVD events.27 There were 18 studies that evaluated the effect of HCV infection on CIMT. FMD is a measure of nitric oxide-mediated endothelial-dependent vasodilation measured in the brachial arteries, which is closely linked to coronary endothelial function. Lower FMD can predict CVD events and early atherosclerotic disease in the general population.27 There were two studies that evaluated the effect of HCV infection on FMD. PWV is a surrogate marker of arterial stiffness, and increased PWV has been associated with CVD and mortality. Three studies evaluated the effect of HCV infection on PWV.

Table 1.

Studies assessing the association between HCV infection and subclinical CVD surrogate markers

Study (year)DesignHCV study population: age in years; sex, %; race/ethnicity; countryMethod of assessment of subclinical CVD; EndpointSample Size, follow up time, calendar timeOutcomeRef.
Ishizaka N et al. (2002)Case-controlAge range: 24–86
Male: 67%

Japan
B-mode US;
CIMT >1.0 mm, Carotid plaques >1.0 mm
n = 4784, 104 HCV patients

1994–2000
  • HCV seropositivity associated with an increased risk of carotid artery plaques (p = 0.002) and CIMT (p < 0.0001)

28
Ishizaka Y et al. (2003)Case-controlAge range: 33–87
Male: 68%

Japan
B-mode US;
CIMT >1.0 mm, Carotid plaques >1.0 mm
n = 1992, HCV patients: 25

2000–2002
  • HCV core protein positivity is an independent predictor of carotid plaques

29
Fukui et al. (2003)Cross-sectionalMean age: 65.6


Japan
Carotid US;
plaques (distinct area of thickening), plaque score
n = 210, HCV patients: 31, controls: 179

  • Presence of plaques and median plaque score (p < 0.001) and mean IMT (p = 0.004) significantly higher in HCV+ vs. controls

  • HCV seropositivity was an independent risk factor for atherosclerosis after adjustment for RF (p < 0.01)

30
Tomiyama et al. (2003)Case-controlAge range: 30–74


Japan
PWVn = 7514, HBV AB+: 218, HBV Ag+: 76, HCV: 87

  • HCV+ vs. HCV− had higher PWV (p < 0.01)

  • HCV+ but not HBV+ or HBV carrier was significantly associated with PWV (p < 0.05)

32
Targher et al. (2007)Case-controlMean age: 46
Male: 34

Italy
Carotid US;
CIMT, plaques >1.2 mm
n = 155, NASH: 60, HCV: 60, HBV: 35, controls: 60

  • IMT measurements markedly different among groups: 1.23 ± 0.2 mm (NASH) vs. 1.09 ± 0.2 (HBV) vs. 0.97 ± 0.1 (HCV) vs. 0.84 ± 0.1 (controls); p < 0.001

  • HCV significantly associated with IMT (p < 0.001)

31
Boddi et al. (2007)Case-controlAge range: 64–80
Male: 55%

Italy
B-mode US;
CIMT >1 mm or plaques ≥2 mm
n = 151, HCV patients: 31, controls: 120

January–April 2003
  • Prevalence of IMT >1 mm significantly higher in HCV+ vs. controls (p < 0.001)

  • Prevalence and severity of internal carotid plaques not different in HCV+ vs. controls

19
Oyake et al. (2008)Prospective cohortMean age: 65
Male: 76%

Japan
Carotid-femoral PWVn = 94, HCV RNA-positive: 17, HCV RNA-negative: 77

October 2002–October 2004
  • PWV significantly higher in serum HCV RNA-positive vs. HCV RNA-negative (p < 0.01)

  • HCV+ status was an independent predictor of high PWV in multiple logistic regression analysis

42
Matsumae et al. (2010)Prospective cohortMean age: 67.3
Male: 73.3%

Japan
Carotid-femoral PWV, ankle-brachial blood pressure indexn = 148, HCV patients: 15
3 years
  • HCV infection was an independent determinant of change in PWV

  • HCV resulted in an estimated annual rate of increase in PWV of 0.34 ms−1 per year (p = 0.02)

41
Mostofa et al. (2010)Cross-sectionalMean age: 51
Male: 195

Egypt
B-mode US, Doppler;
CIMT, plaques >1.3 mm
n = 1297, chronic infection: 329, cleared infection: 173, never infected: 795

2002
  • IMT increased in chronic infection vs. never infected, after adjustment for RF: 0.76, 95% CI: 0.72–0.79 vs. 0.70, 95% CI: 0.67–0.73; p = 0.02

33
Aslam et al. (2010)Meta-analysisMean age: 57.3
Male/female ratio: 1.6

Germany, Italy, Japan, Turkey, UK, USA
CIMT, carotid plaquesn = 12265, HCV patients: 655, articles: 10

  • Carotid plaques more likely in HCV+ vs. HCV− groups (p = 0.05)

  • No significant difference observed in the mean CIMT between two groups (p = 0.30)

43
Sosner et al. (2012)Case-controlAge range: 36–50
Male: 12

France
Doppler US;
carotid plaques >1.5 mm, femoral plaques >2.0 mm, CIMT
n = 40, HIV/HCV co-infected: 18, HIV mono-infected: 22

December 2006–January 2008
  • Prevalence of plaques significantly higher in the HIV/HCV co-infected vs. mono-infected (p = 0.04)

  • HCV chronic infection associated with CIMT (p = 0.02)

34
Adinolfi et al. (2012)Case-controlMedian age (range): 54 (22–70)
Male: 51

Italy
B-mode US;
CIMT >1 mm or plaques ≥1.5 mm
n = 803, HCV patients: 326, controls: 477

2005–2011
  • Higher prevalence of carotid atherosclerosis in HCV+ vs. controls (p < 0.0001)

  • Viral load independently associated with carotid atherosclerosis (p < 0.0001)

24
Petta et al. (2012)Case-controlMean age: 53.2
Male: 75

Italy
B-mode US;
CIMT, plaques >1.3 mm
n = 348, chronic HCV patients: 174, controls: 174

  • IMT greater in HCV+ vs. controls (p < 0.001)

  • Hepatic fibrosis associated with presence of carotid plaques (p = 0.03)

25
Roed et al. (2014)Case-controlMean age: 50.8
Male: 61.7

Denmark
Carotid US;
CIMT value >75th percentile
n = 120, HCV patients: 60, controls: 60

December 2010–July 2011
  • Higher numbers of HCV+ had an increased CIMT above the standard population 75th percentile than controls: 9% vs. 3%; PR: 1.7, 95% CI: 0.4–6.7

15
Petta et al. (2016)Meta-analysis


Egypt, Turkey, Italy, Japan, Taiwan, USA, UK
Carotid plaques, CIMTn = 9083, patients (9 studies)

  • HCV+ vs. HCV− had increased risks of carotid plaques (p < 0.001) without significant heterogeneity (I2 = 31%; p = 0.17) and increased CIMT (p < 0.001), with heterogeneity (I2 = 90%; p = 0.007)

6
Bilora et al. (2002)Case-controlMean age: 58.1
Male: 24

Italy
B-mode US and Doppler;
mean CIMT comparisons, carotid and femoral plaques >2.0 mm
n = 98, chronic viral hepatitis: 48 (HCV: 46), controls: 50
12 months
2001
  • Carotid atherosclerosis less prevalent in chronic viral hepatitis patients vs. controls: 27% vs. 56%, p < 0.005

  • Patients with chronic viral hepatitis had fewer plaques and lower degree of vessel stenosis vs. controls: 16 vs. 59, p < 0.001

36
Bilora et al. (2008)Prospective cohortMean age: 57.1
Male: 18

Italy
B-mode US and Doppler;
mean carotid and femoral IMT, carotid and femoral plaques >2.0 mm
n = 67, chronic viral hepatitis: 33 (HCV: 46), controls: 34
5 years
2006
  • Number of plaques remained unchanged in both groups

  • IMT remained unchanged in HCV+ vs. increased in controls (p < 0.05)

37
Tein et al. (2009)Cross-sectionalMean: 48.5
Male: 0

USA
B-mode US;
CIMT, plaques >1.5 mm
n = 1675, HIV/HCV+: 220, HCV+: 53, HIV+: 95, control: 452

2004–2005
  • CIMT was significantly higher in HCV+ groups vs. HIV-mono-infected group

  • HCV infection was not associated with greater CIMT after adjustment for RF

38
Caliskan et al. (2009)Prospective cohortAge range: 25–67
Male: 13

Turkey
B-mode US, Doppler, brachial artery FMD;
CIMT, plaques >1.0 mm
n = 72, HCV patients: 36, controls: 36
59 months
  • IMT of anti-HCV+ and anti-HCV− patients did not differ significantly (p = 0.44)

  • Plaque score also did not differ significantly between the two groups

40
Masiá et al. (2011)Cross-sectionalMedian age: 43.7
Male: 53

Spain
B-mode US, brachial artery FMD, CIMT;
carotid plaques >1.0 mm
n = 201, HCV+ patients: 63, controls: 138

February–June 2009
  • No significant difference in CIMT (p = 0.39) or FMD (p = 0.37) in HIV/HCV+ vs HIV+ (p = 0.37)

39
Miyajima et al. (2013)Cross-sectionalMean age: 68.5
Male: 17

Japan
Carotid US;
CIMT comparisons
n = 1908, chronic infection (+anti-HCV/+HCV RNA): 40, transient infection (+anti-HCV/−HCV RNA): 88, controls: 1708

2009
  • IMT reduced in chronic infection vs. uninfected group (p = 0.02) and vs. transient infections (p = 0.003)

  • Significant intergroup difference (p = 0.003)

35

Ishizaka and colleagues28,29 first reported on the atherogenic potential of HCV by demonstrating that the presence of anti-HCV antibody was associated with an increased risk of carotid plaque (odds ratio (OR): 1.92, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.56–2.38) and increased CIMT (OR: 2.85, 95% CI: 2.28–3.57),28 and that circulating HCV core protein was a strong independent predictor of carotid plaques (OR: 5.61, 95% CI: 2.06–15.26; p < 0.001).29

Following these initial studies, many authors have corroborated these findings. Fukui et al.30 and Boddi et al.19 found anti-HCV antibody positivity to be an independent factor of increased CIMT, and Adinolfi et al.24 and Roed et al.15 found a statistically significant difference in CIMT and carotid plaques between HCV-infected patients and HCV-uninfected controls. Both Targher et al.31 and Tomiyama et al.32 reported increased PWV and CIMT among HCV-infected patients when compared to controls and hepatitis B virus (HBV)-infected patients. Mostafa et al.33 demonstrated that the prevalence of carotid atherosclerosis did not vary between patients with active infection compared to those with past infection who had cleared the HCV, but chronically-infected patients were shown to have increased CIMT when compared to HCV-uninfected patients. More recently, Sosner et al.34 reported an increased prevalence of carotid plaque in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)/HCV co-infected patients compared to HIV mono-infected patients (8/18 (44%) vs. 3/22 (14%), p = 0.04). All these studies further strengthen evidence for the relationship between HCV infection and atherosclerosis in different populations, and suggest that HCV is an independent risk factor of subclinical atherosclerosis.

Petta et al.25 found significantly greater intima media thickness (IMT) among infected patients compared with controls (1.04 ± 0.21 vs. 0.90 ± 0.16, p < 0.001), and further demonstrated that severe hepatic fibrosis (OR: 2.177, 95% CI: 1.043–4.542; p = 0.03) was independently associated with the presence of carotid plaques in multivariate logistic regression analysis.

In contrast to the above studies which demonstrated an association between CHC infection and carotid atherosclerosis, some other studies found no such association. Miyajima et al.35 evaluated different patient groups consisting of uninfected controls, those who had cleared HCV infection and those who had CHC infection, and found, surprisingly, that IMT was reduced in patients with CHC infection compared to the other two groups. Similarly, Bilora et al.36,37 examined the same cohort of patients with CHC infection in 2001 and 2006 and in both instances found a lower prevalence of carotid IMT and plaques in patients with chronic viral hepatitis compared to uninfected controls. Tien et al.38 found that after adjustment for cardiovascular risk factors HCV was not associated with greater CIMT in HIV/HCV co-infected and HCV mono-infected patients compared to HIV mono-infected patients and uninfected controls; similarly, Masiá et al.39 did not observe a statistically significant difference in CIMT or FMD between HIV/HCV co-infected and HIV mono-infected patients. Caliskan et al.40 found that IMT of anti-HCV-positive and anti-HCV-negative hemodialysis patients did not differ significantly as well (0.76 ± 0.11 mm vs. 0.7 ± 0.15 mm, p = 0.44). In contrast, Matsumae et al.41 and Oyake et al.42 demonstrated an association between HCV and increased PWV among dialysis patients.

In a meta-analysis by Aslam et al.43 HCV-infected patients were more likely to have carotid plaques than uninfected patients (48.2% vs. 20.7%, p = 0.05), but there was no statistical difference in the CIMT among the groups (0.9 mm vs. 0.8 mm, p = 0.3). In another meta-analysis by Petta et al.6 HCV infection was associated with the presence of carotid plaques in eight of the nine studies, but this difference was statistically significant in only five of the studies. The pooled estimate of the effect of HCV infection on carotid plaques (OR: 2.27, 95% CI: 1.76–2.94; p < 0.001) and IMT was significant (mean difference: 0.09, 95% CI: 0.03–0.16; p < 0.001).

Taken together, the preponderance of these data suggests that HCV infection is a risk factor for subclinical CVD, as measured by both vascular stiffness and carotid atherosclerosis.

HCV and CVD

Numerous epidemiological cohort studies have sought to delineate whether the suggested link between subclinical CVD and HCV translates to an increased risk of clinical CVD among HCV-infected patients (Table 2). We have defined clinical CVD as any of the following clinical outcomes: CAD, MI, UA, CVA, TIA, PAD and CHF. Eight studies investigated the effect of HCV infection on composite clinical CVD endpoints that included two or more of the above clinical CVD events.

Table 2.

Studies assessing the association between HCV infection and composite clinical cardiovascular disease endpoints

Study (year)DesignHCV study population: age in years; sex, %; race/ethnicity, %; countryCardiovascular disease outcomes/endpoint, nSample size, person-years, follow-up, calendar TimeOutcomeRef.
Freiburg et al. (2007)Cross-sectionalMean age: 43.9;
Male: 144;
White: 34, Non-white: 66;
USA
Self-reported CVD (MI, PVD, CVA, TIA)n = 395, HIV/HCV co-infected: 198, HIV mono-infected: 197

August 2001–July 2003
  • HIV/HCV+ vs. HIV+ had higher prevalence of CVD

  • Risk of CVD adjusted for age was significantly higher among HIV/HCV co-infected

45
Tsui et al. (2009)Prospective cohortMean age: 59;
Male: 80;
Non-white: 46;
USA
All-cause mortality: 182; CVD: 151: CHD death, MI, stroke, CHF: 119n = 981 CHD patients, HCV patients: 84, HCV negative: 897
4.6 years
September 2000–December 2002
  • HCV+ patients had higher rates of death, CVD events, and heart failure hospitalizations

  • HCV seropositivity remained independently associated with the risk for heart failure events after adjustment for RF

13
Bedimo et al. (2010)Retrospective cohortMean age: 47;
Male: 97.8;
White: 27.5, Black: 61.34, Other: 11.16;
USA
MI, CCV: TIA, stroken = 19424, HIV/HCV co-infected: 6136
3.93 years/76376 person-years
1996–2004
  • HIV/HCV co-infected vs. HIV+ had higher rates of MI and CCV

46
Gillis et al. (2014)Retrospective cohortAge range: 31–42;
Male: 81;
White: 74, Black: 5, Aboriginal: 15;
Canada
Time to first CVD event (CAD, chronic IHD, arteriosclerotic vascular disease, MI, CHF, CVA, CABG, coronary artery angioplasty, sudden cardiac death: 167HIV: 3416, HIV/HCV: 736, HIV/HBV: 736
2.32 years
January 1995–January 2011
  • HIV/HCV+ vs. HIV+ had higher incidence of CVD

  • HCV co-infected patients had a higher risk for CVD after adjustment for RF

44
Enger et al. (2014)Matched retrospective cohortMean age: 49;
Male: 62.4;
African American: 5.2, Hispanic: 4.2, White: 43.9;
USA
Thromboembolic events: DVT, PE, PVT,
MI, UA, ischemic
stroke, TIA, and other thromboembolic events
n = 90931, HCV patients: 22733, controls: 68198
12 months
January 1, 2000–September 30, 2006
  • HCV+ vs. controls had higher incidence of thromboembolic events

  • HCV+ vs. controls had increased IRR for thromboembolic events after adjustment for RF

50
Petta et al. (2016)Meta-analysis


Egypt, Turkey, Italy, Japan, Taiwan, USA, UK
CVD-related mortality carotid atherosclerosis, CIMT, CCV eventsn = 468050 patients (22 studies)

  • HCV+ vs. HCV− had increased risks of:

    • CVD-related mortality (p = 0.02)

    • carotid plaques (p = 0.17)

    • CCV events (p < 0.001).

6
Völzke et al. (2008)Cross-sectional studyMean age: 61.2;
Male: 51;

Germany
MI, stroke, CIMT, carotid plaques, carotid stenosisn = 4266, cases: 233, controls: 4033

October 1997–May 2001
  • No independent association detected between anti-HCV antibody seropositivity and MI, stroke, CIMT, carotid plaques or carotid stenosis

47
Younossi et al. 2013Retrospective cohortAge groups: <45: 43.72%; 45–55: 41.89%; 55–65: 10.7%; >65: 3.7%
Male: 66.58
Caucasian: 62.04
AA: 23.51
NMH: 4.78
MA: 6.66
USA
IHD (CAD or MI), stroke, CHFChronic HCV patients: 173

1999–2010
  • Chronic HCV infection was associated with CHF but not IHD or stroke

48
Coppo et al. (2015)Retrospective cohortMean age: 55.7
Male: 47

Italy
Macroangiopathic diabetic complications MI (3) CVACHC patients: 54, controls: 119
7.2 years
  • Rates of MI (5.5 vs. 1.68%, p = 0.16) and stroke (3.7% vs. 9.2%, p = 0.20) were similar between CHC patients and controls

  • HCV positivity was not associated with development of microangiopathic and macroangiopathic diabetic complications (HR: 0.74, 95% CI: 0.33–1.71; p = 0.49)

49

Tsui et al.13 assessed the rate of CVD events (cardiovascular mortality, MI, stroke, heart failure hospitalizations) among coronary heart disease (CHD) patients and found that HCV seropositive patients had higher rates of death, CVD events, and heart failure hospitalizations during follow-up compared to HCV seronegative patients, but after adjustment for CVD risk factors the HCV seropositivity remained independently associated with the risk for heart failure events only (hazard ratio (HR): 2.13, 95% CI: 1.19–3.80).

In the Ontario HIV Treatment Network Cohort Study, Gillis et al.44 examined the rates of CVD events (CAD, chronic ischemic heart disease (IHD) and arteriosclerotic vascular disease, MI, CHF, CVA, coronary bypass, angioplasty, or sudden cardiac death) in a large cohort of HIV mono-infected and HIV/HCV co-infected patients. There was a higher incidence of CVD events (9.62 vs. 7.59) and an elevated risk of CVD in HIV co-infected patients compared to HIV mono-infected patients (adjusted hazard ratio (aHR): 1.44, 95% CI: 0.97–2.13; p = 0.07). Freiburg et al.45 reported significantly increased rates of CVD and acute myocardial infarction (AMI) among HIV/HCV co-infected patients compared to HIV mono-infected patients (11.1% vs. 2.5%, p < 0.05), and after adjusting for age, HIV/HCV co-infected patients had a significantly high OR for the prevalence of CVD (adjusted OR: 4.65, 95% CI: 1.70–12.71) in the HIV Clinical Case Registry of the Veterans Affairs (VA) Center for Quality Management cohort. Bedimo et al.46 evaluated a cohort of HIV-infected patients and found that rates of AMI and cerebrovascular disease (CVA and TIA) were significantly higher in HIV/HCV co-infected patients than in HIV mono-infected patients: 4.19 vs. 3.36 events/1000 patient-years, respectively (p < 0.001) for AMI and 12.47 vs. 11.12 events/1000 patient-years, respectively (p < 0.001) for cerebrovascular disease.

In contrast, Völzke et al.47 found no significant association between hepatitis B or C infection status and MI, stroke (CVA), CIMT, and carotid plaques or stenosis, though the CI was skewed towards an increased risk of AMI with HCV infection status. In a cohort study of patients with CHC infection, Younossi et al.48 found that HCV-infected patients had a significantly higher prevalence of CHF (3.8% vs. 0.9%, p = 0.047) compared to controls, but there was no statistically significant difference in the prevalence of stroke, IHD, or CVD (a composite outcome including the presence of stroke, CHF, and IHD). In multivariate analysis adjusted for age, obesity and smoking, HCV infection was significantly associated with CHF only (adjusted OR: 2.49, 95% CI: 1.04–5.96). Coppo et al.49 found no difference in the rates of microangiopathic (neuropathy, nephropathy, retinopathy and peripheral vascular disease (PVD)) and macroangiopathic (MI and CVA) complications among HCV-positive and HCV-negative patients.

Enger et al.50 demonstrated that the proportion of patients with thromboembolic events (deep venous thrombosis (DVT), pulmonary embolism (PE), portal venous thrombosis, MI, UA, ischemic stroke, TIA, and other thromboembolic events) was more than 50% higher in the HCV-infected group compared to controls, and the incidence rate ratio (IRR) among HCV-infected patients was 1.62 (95% CI: 1.48–1.77) for any thromboembolic event after adjustment for baseline characteristics.

These studies which investigated the risk of developing clinical CVD (that included more than one CVD endpoint) conferred by CHC infection varied in their definitions of CVD, and therefore have reported conflicting results. Overall, they showed a trend towards a positive association between HCV and different composite endpoints of CVD, especially among the larger cohort studies, such as those conducted by Gillis et al., 44 Freiberg et al.,45 Bedimo et al.46 and Enger et al.50 as well as in the meta-analysis by Petta et al.6

HCV and clinical CAD

Nine studies have evaluated the effect of HCV infection focused only on CAD endpoints (Table 3). CAD was defined variably among the studies, and the study-specific descriptions are reported when reporting study results in the text or corresponding table. Studies that examined composite CVD endpoints were reported in the section above.

Table 3.

Studies assessing the association between HCV infection and clinical CAD

Study (year)DesignStudy Population: Age in years; Sex, %; Race/Ethnicity; CountryCAD Definition/Endpoint, nPerson-Years Follow-up, Calendar TimeOutcomeRef.
Vassalle et al. (2004)Case-controlMean age: 66;
Male: 81.3;

Italy
HCV seropositivityn = 491 CAD patients, Controls: 195

  • Increased rate of HCV seropositivity in CAD patients vs. controls (6.3 vs. 2; p = 0.05), which increased with the number of vessels affected (p < 0.05)

  • HCV seropositivity was an independent predictor of coronary artery disease

51
Ramdeen et al. (2008)Case-controlMean age: 53;


USA
CAD (>50% obstruction of ≥1 major coronary artery): 32n = 72, HCV patients: 36, controls: 36

  • CAD was more prevalent in HCV+ vs. controls (p < 0.005)

  • Two-three vessel CAD was more prevalent in HCV+ vs. controls (p < 0.005)

52
Butt et al. (2009)Matched retrospective cohortMean age: 51.2;
Male: 97.1;
White: 55.4, Black: 29.5, Hispanic: 1.9;
USA
ICD-9 codes for MI, CHF CABG, PCI, CADn = 171665, HCV patients: 823,083, controls: 89,582

2001–2006
  • HCV infection associated with a higher risk of CAD

57
Pothineni et al. (2014)Retrospective cohortMean age: 47.3 (antibody-positive)/ 48.6 (RNA-positive group);
Male: 56.3/57;
White: 76.2/77.1, African American: 18.5/18.4, Others: 5.3/4.5;
USA
ICD-9 codes of CHD.
CHD: chronic stable angina, UA, CAD, AMI: 471
n = 24484, HCV antibody-positive: 8251, HCV RNA-positive: 1434, controls: 14799

2001–2013
  • Higher incidence of CHD events among HCV+ vs. controls

  • HCV antibody and RNA positivity and HCV RNA were independent risk factors for occurrence of CHD events

53
Ambrosino et al. (2016)Meta-analysis



Cardiocerebrovascular disease
HCV patients: 297613, controls: 557814, articles: 27

  • Significantly increased risk of CAD and CVA (p < 0.0001) in HCV+ vs. controls

60
Arcari et al. (2006)Case-controlMean age: 40.2;
Male: 100;
White (non-Hispanic): 60.6, Black: 30.1, Other: 9.25;
USA
ICD-9 codes for MI
HCV seropositivity: 52
MI patients: 292, controls: 290

1991–2000
  • No difference in the prevalence of HCV infection between MI patients vs. controls (p = 0.44)

  • No association found between HCV positivity and acute MI

54
Momiyama et al. (2005)Case-controlMean age: 64;
Male: 82;

Japan
>50% stenosis on angiography;
HCV AB: 15 or HCV core antigen: 5 positivity among CAD patients;
MI: 211
n = 630, CAD patients: 524, controls: 106

  • No difference in prevalence of HCV AB positivity in CAD patients vs. controls

  • HCV positivity was not an independent factor for CAD or MI

55
Butt et al. (2007)Retrospective cohortMean age: 51.8;
Male: 96.8;
White: 48.5, Black: 24.6, Hispanic: 6;
USA
ICD-9 codes for CAD, stroke, PVDHCV patients: 126926, controls: 126926

1999–2003
  • Prevalence of CAD and strokes were lower in the HCV+ vs. control group (p < 0.001)

  • Prevalence of PVD was similar between the two groups (p = 0.3)

  • HCV+ had a lower risk of CAD and strokes than controls after adjustment

56
Forde et al. (2012)Retrospective cohortMedian age: 38.6;
Male: 61.03;

UK
Read code for MI
MI
HCV patients: 4809, controls: 71668
3.2 years
1996–2008
  • No difference in the incidence rates of MI found in HCV+ vs. controls

  • HCV infection was not associated with an increased risk of MI after adjustment

58
D.A.D Study Group (2010)Prospective cohort

White: 55.2, Black: 3.7, Other: 1.3, Unknown: 39.8
USA
MI
MI: 517; stroke: 295
n = 33347, HCV patients: 5084
157912 person-years
1999–2007
  • Similar CVD event rates per 1000 person-years in the HCV+ and HCV− groups

  • No association between HCV seropositivity and the development of MI or stroke

59

The first evidence for an association between HCV and CAD (defined as angiographic documentation of CAD of 50% stenosis or more) was reported by Vassalle et al.51, who reported an increased rate of HCV seropositivity among CAD patients and that HCV seropositivity was an independent predictor of CAD after adjusting for confounding CVD risk factors (OR: 4.2, 95% CI: 1.4–13.0). Similar results were reproduced by Ramdeen et al.52 In a large database from the United States of America (USA), Pothineni et al.53 showed that HCV antibody positivity (OR: 1.32, 95% CI: 1.09–1.60; p < 0.001) and HCV RNA positivity (OR: 1.59, 95% CI: 1.13–2.26; p < 0.001) were independent risk factors for CHD events and that patients with detectable HCV RNA had a significantly higher incidence of CHD events compared to those with only HCV antibody positive but no detectable RNA (5.9% vs. 4.7%, p = 0.04).

In contrast, Arcari et al.54 found no association between HCV and AMI (relative risk (RR): 0.91, 95% CI: 0.52–1.6) among young, active-duty USA military personnel. Momiyama et al.55 reported comparable rates of HCV antibody positivity among angiographically documented CAD (at least 50% stenosis in a major coronary artery) patients and controls.

Butt et al.56 performed two large studies utilizing the USA VA National Patient Care Database. In data from 1999 to 2003 including 126,926 HCV-infected and uninfected patients, the authors found that after adjusting for demographics and CVD risk factors the odds of CAD (defined by implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) 9 codes for AMI, other acute and subacute forms of IHD, old MI, angina pectoris, and other forms of chronic IHD, aortocoronary bypass and percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty) were significantly lower in HCV-positive patients compared to HCV-negative patients (adjusted OR: 0.74, 95% CI: 0.71–0.76). However, in the 2001 to 2006 analysis of over 80,000 HCV-infected and uninfected patients each, Butt et al.57 found that HCV-infected patients had a higher risk of CAD when compared to HCV-uninfected patients (HR: 1.27, 95% CI: 1.22–1.31), despite HCV-infected patients having more favorable lipid profiles compared to controls in multivariate regression models. There were subtle differences between these two studies that may potentially explain their different results. In the first study HCV status was determined by ICD coding, while in the second study HCV status was determined by serological status. Also, the study periods were different, which may have reflected changing HCV treatment options since the regimen of pegylated-interferon (IFN) alpha-2a and ribavirin was approved in 2002. Other large cohorts in the United Kingdom (UK)58 and across several continents (the so-called D:A:D collaboration59 of 11 cohorts) also demonstrated no effect of HCV infection and rates of MI.

Given the mixed findings in prior studies focusing exclusively on CAD endpoints, Ambrosino et al.60 conducted a large meta-analysis to evaluate the impact of CHC infection on the risk of CAD. CAD was defined as the presence of at least one among the following: MI, UA, chronic stable angina, angiographic evidence of ≥50% stenosis in one or more coronary vessels, history of coronary revascularization, ischemic electrocardiogram according to validated criteria (major Q or QS wave, complete left-bundle branch block, small Q or QS wave, ST depression, T wave abnormality). A total of 20 studies including 273,219 HCV-infected and 473,928 HCV-uninfected patients showed a significantly increased risk of CAD associated with HCV positivity (OR: 1.382, 95% CI: 1.103–1.732; p = 0.005; I2 = 99%; p = 0.0001). Therefore, the sum of these data among various studies remains inconclusive, with several large cohort studies reporting no association between HCV infection and CAD but a few others, including the large meta-analysis cited above, finding positive associations between HCV infection and CAD.

HCV and angiographic CAD

Six studies investigated the effect of HCV on CAD based on coronary artery angiographic findings (Table 4). CAD severity was assessed using previously validated scoring systems. Both the Reardon severity scoring system61 and the Gensini score62 visual scoring systems of CAD severity are based upon coronary angiography findings which take into account the number of vessels involved, location of the vessel, significance of the myocardial territory supplied, and degree of vessel stenosis.

Table 4.

Studies assessing the association between HCV and angiographic CAD

Study (year)DesignHCV Population: Age in years; Sex, %; Race/Ethnicity; CountryEndpoint, nPerson-Years Follow-up, Calendar TimeOutcomeRef.
Alyan et al. (2008)Case-controlMean age: 61.2
Male: 76.3

Turkey
CAD, Reardon severity scoren = 364, HCV patients: 139, controls: 225

2003–2007
  • Increased rates of multi-vessel CAD (>2 vessels) in HCV+ vs. controls: 126 (91.6%) vs. 166 (74.1%), p < 0.001

  • Increased Reardon severity scores in HCV+ vs. controls (p < 0.001)

  • HCV seropositivity was an independent predictor for severity of coronary atherosclerosis (p < 0.001)

11
Satapathy et al. (2013)Case-controlMean age: 60.9
Male: 41
White: 55.6, African American: 18, Hispanic: 3, Asian: 7
USA
CAD prevalence, Reardon scoren = 116, HCV patients: 63, controls: 63

2002–2008
  • Higher prevalence (p = 0.01) and severity (p < 0.0005) of CAD in HCV+ vs. controls

  • HCV+ status was significantly associated with CAD (p = 0.007)

63
Salam et al. (2016)Cross-sectionalMean age: 54.08
Male: 55.9

Egypt
CAD severity: Gensini scoren = 509, HCV patients: 118

2013–2014
  • Increased HCV prevalence among CAD patients vs. controls (34.3% vs. 21.8%, p = 0.004)

  • Increased Gensini score among HCV+ vs. HCV− (p = 0.01)

64
Olubamwo et al. (2016)Meta-analysis


CAD, CAD severity, CAD-related coronary events10 studies

  • Increased risk of CAD among HCV+: OR: 3.06, 95% CI: 1.99–4.72

66
Pothineni et al. (2015)Case-controlMean age: 52
Male: 60.6

USA
CAD, Gensini scoren = 122, HCV patients: 61, controls: 61

2001–2013
  • Obstructive CAD less frequent in HCV+ vs. controls: 23% vs. 39%, p < 0.05

  • Gensini score was similar in both groups

  • No significant correlation found between HCV RNA titers and Gensini score (p = 0.9)

65

Alyan et al.11 used a modified Reardon severity scoring system and demonstrated that CAD severity scores were significantly higher in the HCV seropositive group than in the control group (p < 0.001), and HCV seropositivity was an independent predictor for the severity of coronary atherosclerosis (OR: 2.018, 95% CI: 1.575–2.579; p < 0.001) after adjustment for age, sex, smoking, hypertension, DM, body mass index (BMI), CRP and fibrinogen.11 In patients undergoing coronary angiography for evaluation of CAD, Satapathy et al.63 observed a significantly higher prevalence of CAD (69.8% vs. 47.6%, p = 0.01), significantly higher modified Reardon’s severity scores (6.26 ± 5.39 vs. 2.6 ± 3.03, p < 0.0005), and significant multivessel CAD (defined as >50% stenosis in ≥2 vessels involved; 57.1% vs. 15.9%, p < 0.0005) among the HCV-infected patients compared to controls. Salam et al.64 reported that HCV antibody-positive patients had more severe coronary lesions than seronegative patients among those referred for angiography. Unlike the previous studies, Pothineni et al.65 found no significant differences between HCV-infected patients and controls in the number of vessels with obstructive coronary disease, and there was no correlation between HCV RNA titers and severity of CAD as assessed by the Gensini score (p = 0.90).

Nonetheless, a meta-analysis by Olubamwo et al.66 concluded that HCV infection may increase the risk of occurrence and the severity of coronary atherosclerosis, which seems consistent with the results of the vast majority of studies evaluating the effect of HCV infection on severity of CAD.

HCV and CVA

There were nine studies that investigated the association between HCV infection and the development of CVA and/or mortality due to strokes. In the studies discussed below, CVA was defined by new onset neurological deficits not attributable to other causes based on ICD codes or supporting neuroimaging.

In a large prospective population-based cohort, Liao et al.67 reported that the cumulative risk of stroke in HCV-infected patients was significantly higher than in HCV-uninfected patients (adjusted OR: 1.27, 95% CI: 1.14–1.41). Similar results by Adinolfi et al.16 demonstrated that patients with ischemic stroke had a significantly higher prevalence of HCV infection than controls (26.2% vs. 6.6% respectively, p = 0.0001), and that HCV infection was an independent risk factor for stroke (OR: 2.04, 95% CI: 1.69–2.46; p = 0.0001). In a large Australian study, Lee et al.68 observed that CHC infection was an independent risk predictor of cerebrovascular deaths and there was an increase in cerebrovascular mortality with increasing serum HCV RNA level. Hsu et al.69,70 strengthened the relationship between HCV infection and CVA by showing that the incidence of stroke decreased following IFN treatment in one large retrospective and a recent prospective cohort study. Finally, while large artery atherosclerosis is certainly a risk factor for CVA among HCV-infected patients, small vessel disease may also play a role and HCV has been associated with an increase in mean arteriolar wall thickness in the deep cerebral white matter.71 In contrast to the above studies, Younossi et al.48 found no significant association between HCV infection and stroke (adjusted OR: 0.58, 95% CI: 0.16–2.02).

In a meta-analysis by Huang et al.72 which included six studies, the authors concluded that HCV infection significantly increased the risk of stroke, and a second meta-analysis of 13 studies conducted by Ambrosino et al.60 found a significantly increased risk of cerebrovascular disease in HCV patients compared to uninfected controls (OR: 1.485, 95% CI: 1.079–2.044). In conclusion, the association between CHC infection and cerebrovascular disease has been demonstrated consistently in many population cohort studies and in two separate meta-analyses with only Younossi et al.48 reporting differing results.

PAD

There was only one study that investigated the effect of HCV infection on the development of PAD. Hsu et al.73 found that among 7,641 patients with CHC after adjusting for age, sex, urbanization level, and comorbidities (hypertension, HL, DM, IHD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, chronic kidney disease/end-stage renal disease, CVA, and acute alcoholic hepatitis), HCV-infected patients had a higher risk of developing PAD, as assessed by ICD codes for PAD, compared to age- and sex-matched controls (HR: 1.43, 95% CI: 1.23–1.67). The risk of PAD development increased substantially with the number of comorbidities, and HCV-infected patients with four comorbidities had the highest risk of developing PAD (HR: 9.25, 95% CI: 6.35–13.5). Further studies are needed to determine if HCV infection truly impacts the development of PAD.

HCV and cardiomyopathy

Myocarditis and subsequent cardiomyopathy can be caused by several cardiotropic viruses. HCV has been among viruses associated with cardiomyopathy, and its effect has been hypothesized to be independent from its ischemic effects on the myocardium.74 Both Younossi et al.48 and Tsui et al.13 reported increased rates of heart failure events among patients with CHC compared to controls, and HCV was found to be an independent factor for CHF events on multivariable analysis.

Both dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM; characterized by dilation and impaired contraction of one or both ventricles) and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM; characterized by increased ventricular wall mass not caused by conditions causing volume overload) have been linked to HCV infection.75 Matsumori et al.23 reported an increased prevalence of HCV antibodies among patients with DCM, and detected HCV genomes within the samples of autopsied hearts from patients with myocarditis and patients with DCM or HCM. Matsumori et al.76 later found a statistically significant increased prevalence of serum-detectable HCV RNA in patients with myocarditis or cardiomyopathy compared to those with IHD. However, Dalekos et al.77 and Fujioka et al.78 evaluated patients with idiopathic DCM (IDCM) and found no association between HCV infection and IDCM. Similarly, Grumbatch et al.79 observed no association between DCM and HCV infection in patients with DCM and myocarditis compared to controls. Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) and non-HLA haplotypes have been identified in some patients with HCV-associated cardiomyopathy, suggesting a role of genetic predisposition which may differ among various patient populations, thus possibly explaining discordant results obtained in studies from Japan and Europe.74

Both Matsumori et al.23 and Teragaki et al.80 examined sera of HCM patients and matched controls and found a significantly increased prevalence of HCV antibodies among those with HCM. Matsumori et al.23 also identified HCV genomes within heart tissue biopsies of patients with HCM, suggesting a causal link.

HCV and cardiovascular mortality

Eight longitudinal cohort studies have evaluated mortality rates among HCV-infected patients (Table 5). Some of these studies demonstrated increased mortality rates among HCV-infected patients not only from liver related causes but also from CVD. However, other studies observed contrasting results.

Table 5.

Studies assessing the association between HCV and cardiovascular mortality

Study (year)DesignStudy population: age in years; sex, %; race/ethnicity; countryEndpoint, nPerson-years, follow-up, calendar timeOutcomeRef.
Younossi et al. (1999)Retrospective cohortMean age: 49.7
Male: 67

USA
Mortality, CHD (3), morbidity and allograft functionn = 54, HCV patients: 15, controls: 39

  • No significant difference in CHD rates between HCV+ and controls: 46.6% vs. 20.5%, p = 0.09

  • Death from CHD was significantly more frequent in the HCV+ group (p = 0.018)

84
Amin et al. (2006)Retrospective cohortMedian age: 35
Male: 63

Australia
All-cause mortality: 1233n = 117547, HCV patients: 75834, HCV/HBV patients: 2604
3.5–5.4 years
1990–2002
  • Significant increase in all-cause mortality and circulatory-related deaths in the HBV/HCV co-infected group vs. the HCV group

81
Guiltinan et al. (2008)Retrospective cohortAverage age of death: 50
Male: 6627
White: 960, Black: 137, Hispanic: 166, Asian: 51
USA
All-cause mortalityn = 20518, HCV patients: 10259, controls: 10259
7.7 years
1991–2002
  • Increased mortality in the HCV vs. control group (p < 0.00001)

  • HCV was significantly associated with cardiovascular deaths

82
Lee et al. (2012)Retrospective cohortMean age: 50.8
Male: 42.5

Taiwan
All-cause mortality: 2394n = 23820, HCV patients: 1095, controls: 19636
16.2 years
1991–2008
  • Increased all-cause mortality among HCV+ vs. controls: HR: 1.89, 95% CI: 1.66–2.1

  • Increased mortality from circulatory disease among HCV+ vs. controls: HR: 2.77, 95% CI: 1.49–5.15

  • Increased mortality from circulatory disease in patients with detectable HCV RNA vs. undetectable HCV RNA (p = 0.026)

83
Fabrizi et al. (2012)Meta-analysisAge range: 40–69.87
Male: 45.6–71.5

Australia, Japan, Italy, Spain, Taiwan, USA
All-cause mortality13 articles, n = 145608 patients

  • Increased risk of all-cause mortality with anti-HCV status: aRR: 1.35, 95% CI: 1.25–1.47

  • Increased risk of CVD death with anti-HCV status: aRR: 1.26, 95% CI: 1.10–1.45

85
Petta et al. (2016)Meta-analysis


Egypt, Turkey, Italy, Japan, Taiwan USA, UK
CVD-related mortalityn = 468050 patients (22 studies)
  • HCV+ vs. HCV− had increased risk of CVD-related mortality (p = 0.02)

6
Vajdic et al. (2015)Retrospective cohortMedian age: 26
Male: 69

Australia
Cause-specific mortality: 1834n = 29571
HCV patients: 15523
7.3 years
1993–2007
  • No increased risk of death from CVD among HCV+: HR: 1.4, 95% CI: 0.9–1.9

86
Kristiansen et al. (2011)Retrospective cohortMedian age: 41
Male: 68

Norway
All-cause mortality: 122n = 1010
HCV patients: 122
7 years
2004–2006
  • No statistically significant increase in mortality from cardiovascular disease among HCV+ patients

  • No significant reduction in mortality with anti-HCV treatment: HR: 0.807, 95% CI: 0.348–1.870; p 0.617

87

Amin et al.81 found that the incidence of mortality related to CVD (as defined by ICD-10 codes for circulatory disease) as well as all-cause mortality was increased among HCV patients compared to controls, with death from CVD being the most common cause of death (standardized mortality ratio: 1.3, 95% CI: 1.2–1.5). Guiltinan et al.82 noted that HCV-positive blood donors had increased cardiovascular mortality compared to matched HCV-seronegative controls (HR: 2.21, 95% CI: 1.41–3.46), but their data lacked confounding factors on CVD. In the REVEAL prospective cohort of adults with positive anti-HCV antibodies (69% of whom had detectable HCV RNA), Lee et al.83 showed that there was an increase in both hepatic and extrahepatic mortality when compared to seronegative controls and an increased risk of death from CVD based on diagnoses reported in the Taiwanese National Death Certification Registry. Additionally, mortality from CVD was significantly higher among patients who had detectable HCV RNA levels compared to those with undetectable HCV RNA but positive anti-HCV antibodies, suggesting antiviral therapy may have a role in decreasing HCV related CVD mortality.

HCV-related CVD mortality has also been studied among renal patients. Younossi et al.84 reported that death due to CHD was significantly increased in HCV-infected renal transplant recipients compared to HCV-uninfected recipients. A meta-analysis by Fabrizi et al.85 in long-term dialysis patients demonstrated that anti-HCV antibody positivity was an independent and significant risk factor for death in patients on maintenance dialysis.

In contrast, Vadjic et al.86 found no association between HCV infection and CVD mortality among opioid substitution therapy registrants. Kristiansen et al.87 also observed no statistically significant increase in standardized mortality ratios due to CVD. In a meta-analysis of the three studies above involving non-renal patients, Petta et al.6 reported that the pooled estimate of the effect of HCV infection on CVD mortality was significant (OR: 1.65, 95% CI: 1.07–2.56; p = 0.02), but with significant heterogeneity (I2 = 76%; p = 0.02).

The data reported from the various studies, and some with large sample sizes, investigating the impact of HCV infection on cardiovascular mortality was mixed, and therefore the association remains inconclusive. However, there is a suggestion of increased CVD mortality due to HCV infection when the data are considered in total.

Effect of HCV treatment on cardiovascular disease and outcomes

Advances in the development of DAAs has resulted in dramatic improvements in HCV treatment, with ability to achieve SVR >90% in most HCV-infected patients.88 Notably, the clinical benefits of SVR have been shown to extend beyond hepatic disease.89 Therefore, it is of great interest to determine whether these novel DAAs will further reduce CVD-attributable morbidity and mortality among HCV-infected patients because demonstration of improved CVD-attributable morbidity and mortality with HCV therapy would offer powerful data supporting the role of HCV infection on CVD outcomes.

In a case-control study of 50 patients with CHC infection, Pateria et al.18 found significant improvement in PWV in HCV-treated patients who had achieved SVR compared to those who had not achieved SVR (PWV 7.4 ± 1.1 m/s vs. 6.5 ± 0.6 m/s, p = 0.04). Maruyama et al.26 performed thallium-201 myocardial scintigraphy on 217 patients with CHC infection, and 87% were found to have abnormal scintigraphy scans with liver histology activity index score and serum HCV RNA titers at baseline associated with greater abnormalities on scintigraphy scans. After interferon (IFN) therapy, scintigraphy scans improved in patients who achieved SVR.

In the French ANRS CO12 CirVir90 prospective cohort of 1,323 CHC-infected patients treated with IFN and DAAs, the authors found that patients who achieved SVR had a lower risk of cardiovascular events, which included CHF, IHD, cardiac arrhythmia, CVA, valvular cardiomyopathy, PAD, cardiac arrest and aortic aneurysm (HR: 0.42; 95% CI: 0.25–0.69; p = 0.001). Similarly, in a Scottish cohort91 of 3,385 CHC-infected patients followed up to a median of 5.3 years, SVR was significantly associated with CVD after 7.5 years of follow-up (aHR: 3.4, 95% CI: 0.5–6.1; p = 0.019).

Using data from the Taiwanese National Health Insurance Database, authors have repeatedly shown cardiovascular benefits associated with HCV clearance and achievement of SVR. Hsu et al.69,70 demonstrated decreased incidence of stroke following IFN treatment and decreased HRs for ischemic strokes and acute coronary syndrome (ACS) associated with HCV clearance after IFN-based therapy among diabetic patients. Finally, in a prospective cohort study of 12,384 patients, multivariate analyses revealed that antiviral treatment with pegylated-IFN plus ribavirin was associated with a lower risk of ACS (HR: 0.77, 95% CI: 0.62–0.97; p = 0.026) and ischemic stroke (HR: 0.62; 95% CI: 0.46–0.83; p = 0.001).92

Unlike in the Taiwanese studies, the large, multicenter, longitudinal Italian HIV/HCV co-infection cohort study (MASTER cohort)93 found that the pooled probability of CVD and death was significantly lower in patients who achieved SVR after treatment with IFN-based therapy compared to those did not achieve SVR (log-rank p = 0.0059, p = 0.04 and p < 0.0001, respectively). However, the significant association did not remain in the Cox regression analysis model in which achieving SVR was not associated with decreased CVD (CHD, cerebrovascular disease, chronic heart failure, or PVD). Notably, key CVD confounding factors (blood pressure, smoking, and BMI) were not available in the cohort.

The majority of the findings from studies evaluating the impact of HCV therapy on CVD morbidity and mortality showed an improvement in subclinical and clinical CVD endpoints in patients who achieved SVR. These results are of particular interest following the development of new DAAs which have revolutionized HCV treatment and made HCV eradication simple and feasible for many more patients globally, and in doing so may possibly reduce CVD morbidity and mortality in those with CHC infection.

Discussion

HCV infection, particularly CHC infection, appears to result in increased subclinical and clinical CVD outcomes and to lead to increased morbidity and mortality. Large well conducted studies have produced compelling yet conflicting data. There is a large and robust body of data supporting the association between HCV and subclinical CVD, as measured by CIMT, FMD and/or PWV. Many large population-based studies28,29 as well as case controls studies24,30 have reported positive associations between CHC infection and increased risk of carotid atherosclerosis, whereas, in contrast, studies among smaller cohorts have not found this association in specific patient populations who represent high-risk groups for the development of atherosclerosis, such as those on hemodialysis40 or HIV co-infected patients.38,39 The association between HCV infection and subclinical CVD is further strengthened by meta-analyses which included studies with negative results and yet found significant pooled estimates of the effect of HCV on increased carotid atherscelorisis.6,43

On the other hand, studies investigating the association between HCV infection and different clinical CVD endpoints have shown mixed results. The differences in results may be due to differences in study designs, patient populations, varying definitions of HCV positive patients (ICD codes vs. serological testing), different types of endpoints assessed (MI, UA, CAD, CVA, PAD) and how they were measured (angiography findings, self-reported CVD events, ICD codes), and lack of comprehensive and consistent collection of traditional cardiovascular risk factors among studies resulting in incomplete adjustments for these cardiovascular risk factors in the multivariate analyses. Among the clinical CVD endpoints, the association between HCV and CVA appears to be the strongest, with the majority of studies reporting a positive association. In addition, an association between HCV viral burden and increased risk of CVA has been noted.68,72

The preponderance of the data suggests an increased risk for the development of coronary artery atherosclerosis as well as an increase in the severity of CAD based on the majority of case-control studies in which HCV-infected patients underwent coronary angiography.11,51–53,63,64,66 However, it is uncertain whether the likely increased risk of coronary atherosclerosis translates to an increased risk of MI among these patients since many studies were unable to demonstrate an association between HCV infection and rates of MI. For example in the study by Forde et al.,58 HCV infection did not increase the risk of MI but the mean follow-up period was only 3.2 years, which may have limited the ability to detect an association given the chronic nature of atherosclerosis and the cumulative risk that eventually leads to the sentinel clinical event of MI.

Using the NHANES data Younossi et al.48 also did not find any association between HCV and CVD except with CHF, but it is important to note that in this study patients with CHC infection were significantly older and had a higher rate of hypertension, insulin resistance and smoking history than those without HCV infection, which may have attenuated the ability to detect such an association. Notably, the D.A.D cohort study59 that included 11 cohorts across multiple continents and which included adjustment for many though not all traditional CVD risk factors (large percentage of unknown race, rates of illicit drug use, hypertension, and DM) was unable to demonstrate an association between CHC infection and risk of stroke or MI.

Interestingly, while an initial study conducted by Butt et al.56,57 reported that HCV infection (diagnosed using ICD codes) exhibited a protective effect on CVD, a subsequent follow up study using serological testing to define HCV infection reported the opposite finding that HCV-infected patients had an increased risk of developing CVD. These two studies by the same authors highlight that differences in defining study populations may be critical in explaining some of the observed differences among studies.

Other studies such as those by Völzke et al.47 and Arcari et al.54 were significantly limited by the very small number of HCV cases included, and/or by a special patient population, such as young and fit active military personnel in the latter. Despite the mixed results of individual cohort and case-control studies evaluating the association between HCV and MI, several meta-analyses have consistently found that HCV infection increased the risk of CAD among HCV-infected patients.6,60,66

If HCV truly increased risk of developing subclinical and consequently clinical CVD outcomes, then it would be expected that this increased CVD risk should lead to increased cardiovascular mortality. Indeed, studies that investigated the association between HCV infection and CVD mortality using death registries have generally reported increased mortality among HCV-infected patients. Furthermore, in the study by Lee et al.83 which adjusted for many CVD factors and included a mean follow-up of 16 years demonstrated not only increased mortality from circulatory disease but also that HCV eradication ameliorated the CVD risk. This finding has significant implications in the current era of DAA therapy, since large numbers of patients can be treated successfully for CHC, and suggests that HCV therapy could potentially mitigate CVD risk and outcomes among CHC-infected patients. Numerous studies have demonstrated that higher risk CHC-infected patients such as those with higher HCV viral load and HCV-related liver disease (hepatic steatosis and/or fibrosis) have increased CVD,24–26,53 and so the potential to reduce morbidity and mortality in these higher risk CHC patient groups is of great public health significance.

There were several strengths to our systematic review. First, it presented a thorough, comprehensive description of the literature on the associations between HCV and subclinical and numerous different clinical CVD outcomes (severity of CAD, PAD, cardiomyopathy, CVD mortality) not included in many other reviews of this topic. Second, it reported data on the effect of HCV therapy on subclinical and clinical CVD outcomes, including CVD mortality, not reported in most other reviews. Our review was limited, however, by the heterogeneous study designs, study populations and subclinical and clinical outcomes examined, as well as inconsistent and incomplete capturing of traditional CV risk factors among studies, all of which made it challenging to reconcile differences in results among them and limited our ability to make firm conclusions. Another limitation was that we did not conduct a systemic meta-analysis, but we felt that excluding so many relevant studies in the pursuit of the meta-analysis would compromise the focus of reporting comprehensive data on a heterogeneous group of surrogate measures of subclinical CVD and different clinical CVD endpoints, which necessitated including studies with very heterogeneous designs. Furthermore, the scope of our review did not account for the possible contribution of genetic variations leading to genetic predisposition of different ethnic groups and different HCV genotypes with CHC infection to CVD outcomes.

Conclusions

The current data support the assertion that CHC infection increases the risk of subclinical and likely clinical CVD, through a multifactorial cascade which may include direct and indirect immune and inflammatory effects, metabolic derangements and possibly direct cardiotropism exhibited by the HCV virus. There is an urgent need for translational research to delineate these proposed mechanisms for the apparent association between HCV and CVD. Additionally, more prospective cohort studies conducted in different patient populations are needed to confirm the findings of HCV infection and increased subclinical and clinical CVD. Furthermore, larger, well-designed therapeutic studies are critical to establish whether CHC truly increases CVD risk and to evaluate if HCV treatment can attenuate or even eliminate that increased CVD risk. The promise of large-scale HCV therapy ushered in by the highly efficacious and well tolerated DAAs has arrived, and therefore understanding the relationship between HCV and CVD and how this relationship is affected by HCV eradication with treatment has substantial public health implications.

Abbreviations

AA: 

African American

AB: 

antibody

ACS: 

acute coronary syndrome

aHR: 

adjusted hazard ratio

AMI: 

acute myocardial infarction

aRR: 

adjusted relative risk

BMI: 

body mass index

CABG: 

coronary artery bypass graft

CAD: 

coronary artery disease

CCV: 

cerebrocardiovascular

CHC: 

chronic hepatitis C

CHD: 

coronary heart disease

CHF: 

congestive heart failure

CI: 

confidence interval

CIMT: 

carotid intima media thickness

CRP: 

C-reactive protein

CVA: 

cerebrovascular accident

CVD: 

cardiovascular disease

DAAs: 

direct-acting antiviral agents

DCM: 

dilated cardiomyopathy

DM: 

diabetes mellitus

DVT: 

deep venous thrombosis

FMD: 

flow-mediated dilation

HBV: 

hepatitis B virus

HCM: 

hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

HCV: 

hepatitis C virus

HIV: 

human immunodeficiency virus

HLA: 

human leukocyte antigen

HLD: 

hyperlipidemia

HR: 

hazard ratio

ICD: 

implantable cardioverter defibrillator

IDCM: 

idiopathic DCM

IFN: 

interferon

IHD: 

ischemic heart disease

IL: 

interleukin

IMT: 

intima media thickness

IR: 

insulin resistance

IRR: 

incidence rate ratio

MA: 

Mexican American

MI: 

myocardial infarction

NASH: 

non-alcoholic steatohepatitis

NMH: 

non-Mexican Hispanic

OR: 

odds ratio

PAD: 

peripheral arterial disease

PE: 

pulmonary embolism

PR: 

prevalence ratio

PVD: 

peripheral vascular disease

PVT: 

peripheral venous thrombosis

PWV: 

pulse wave velocity

RF: 

risk factor

RNA: 

ribonucleic acid

SMR: 

standardized mortality ratio

SVR: 

sustained viral response

TIA: 

transient ischemic attack

TNF: 

tumor necrosis factor

VA: 

Veterans Affairs

UA: 

unstable antigen

UK: 

United Kingdom

US: 

ultrasound

USA: 

United States of America

Declarations

Conflict of interest

The authors have no conflict of interests related to this publication.

Authors’ contributions

Contributed to the analysis and interpretation of data, and critical revision of the manuscript (JJ, SK, MK, AS, AB, SB), conception of the study design, collection, analysis and interpretation of data, manuscript writing and serial critical revisions of the manuscript (AB, SB).

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Risk of Cardiovascular Disease Due to Chronic Hepatitis C Infection: A Review

Ahmed Babiker, Jean Jeudy, Seth Kligerman, Miriam Khambaty, Anoop Shah, Shashwatee Bagchi
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