bms-790052 and Coronary-Artery-Disease

bms-790052 has been researched along with Coronary-Artery-Disease* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for bms-790052 and Coronary-Artery-Disease

ArticleYear
Cure or curd: Modification of lipid profiles and cardio-cerebrovascular events after hepatitis C virus eradication.
    The Kaohsiung journal of medical sciences, 2020, Volume: 36, Issue:11

    Hepatitis C virus (HCV) eradication deteriorates lipid profiles. Although HCV eradication may reduce the risk of vascular events as a whole, whether deteriorated lipid profiles increases the risk of cardio-cerebral disease in certain patients is elusive. Serial lipid profiles were measured before, during, at and 3 months after the end of direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) therapy, and annually thereafter in chronic hepatitis C patients who achieved a sustained virological response (SVR, undetectable HCV RNA at posttreatment week 12). The primary end-point was the occurrence of the events. A total of 617 patients were included, with a mean follow-up period of 26.8 months (range: 1-65 months). The total cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) levels increased significantly from treatment week 4 to 2 years after treatment. Logistic regression analysis revealed that the factors independently associated with a significant cholesterol increase included age (odds ratio [OR]/95% confidence intervals [CIs]:1.02/1.006-1.039, P = .007) and smoking (OR/CI:3.21/1.14-9.02, P = .027). Five patients developed cardio-cerebral diseases during 1376 person-years follow-up period. Compared to patients without vascular events, a significantly higher proportion of those with vascular events experienced an LDL-C surge >40% (80% vs 19.9%, P = .001). Cox-regression analysis revealed that an LDL-C surge >40% was the only factor predictive of vascular events (HR/CI: 15.44/1.73-138.20, P = .014). Dyslipidemia occurred after HCV eradication, and it was associated with the risk of cardio-cerebrovascular diseases. Attention should also be paid to the extrahepatic consequence beyond liver-related complications in the post-SVR era.

    Topics: Aged; Antiviral Agents; Carbamates; Cholesterol, HDL; Cholesterol, LDL; Coronary Artery Disease; Dyslipidemias; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Hepacivirus; Hepatitis C, Chronic; Humans; Imidazoles; Male; Middle Aged; Pyrrolidines; Ribavirin; Risk; RNA, Viral; Sofosbuvir; Sustained Virologic Response; Triglycerides; Valine

2020