HIV/HCV 
                  Coinfected People with Insulin Resistance Do Not Respond as 
                  Well to Interferon-based Therapy
                
                  
                   
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                          | SUMMARY: 
                            After controlling for other risk factors, insulin 
                            resistance was an independent predictor of poor response 
                            to interferon plus ribavirin combination therapy for 
                            chronic hepatitis C in people with HIV, according 
                            to a Spanish study published in the June 
                            23, 2010 Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency 
                            Syndromes. The researchers suggested that 
                            management of insulin resistance may enhance response 
                            rates in the HIV/HCV coinfected population. |  |  |  | 
                   
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                By 
                  Liz Highleyman
                  
                  HIV/HCV coinfected 
                  people tend to experience faster liver disease progression 
                  and do not respond as well to interferon-based 
                  therapy as HIV negative people with hepatitis 
                  C alone. 
                  
                  A number of factors predict poor treatment response in coinfected 
                  and HCV monoinfected patients alike, including HCV genotype, 
                  baseline HCV viral load, and extent of liver 
                  fibrosis or cirrhosis. 
                  Several studies have also implicated insulin resistance, though 
                  results have not been consistent.
                  
                  Pablo Ryan and colleagues retrospectively evaluated the effect 
                  of insulin resistance on rates of sustained virological response 
                  (SVR) in HIV/HCV coinfected patients, reviewing clinical records 
                  of coinfected patients treated with interferon plus ribavirin 
                  at Hospital Gregorio Maranon in Madrid between July 2000 and 
                  March 2007. 
                  
                  Among the 218 treated coinfected patients, 162 had available 
                  baseline insulin resistance information and 134 were included 
                  in the on-treatment analysis. Most (67%) had hard-to-treat HCV 
                  genotypes 1 or 4 and 36% had advanced (stage F3-F4) liver fibrosis. 
                  
                  
                  Insulin resistance was defined as a homeostasis model assessment 
                  (HOMAR) value >3.8. SVR was defined as an undetectable 
                  HCV RNA at 24 weeks after completion of treatment. 
                  
                  Results  
                  
                
                   
                    |  | 67 
                      patients (50%) achieved sustained virological response: | 
                  
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                          |  | 38% 
                            for those with genotypes 1 or 4; |   
                          |  | 79% 
                            for those with genotypes 2 or 3. |  | 
                   
                    |  | Patients 
                      with insulin resistance had a significantly lower SVR rate 
                      (odds ratio [OR] 0.33; P = 0.006). | 
                   
                    |  | Independent 
                      variables that predicted SVR were: | 
                   
                    |  | HCV 
                      genotype 2 or 3 (OR 6.7; P < 0.001); | 
                   
                    |  | 
                         
                          |  | Absence 
                            of insulin resistance at baseline (OR 3.3; P = 0.008); |   
                          |  | Lower 
                            nadir (lowest-ever) CD4 T-cell count (OR 1.002; P 
                            = 0.047). |  | 
                
                These 
                  findings, the researchers concluded, "suggest that insulin 
                  resistance is an important determinant of SVR in HIV/HCV coinfected 
                  patients treated with interferon plus ribavirin."
                  
                  "Strategies to modify insulin resistance should be explored 
                  to enhance SVR during anti-HCV therapy," they recommended.
                  
                  Investigator affiliations: Department of Microbiology, Hospital 
                  Gregorio Maranon, Madrid, Spain; Biomedical Research Foundation, 
                  Hospital Gregorio Maranon, Madrid, Spain; Instituto de Salud 
                  Carlos III, Majadahonda, Spain.
                  
                  7/13/10
                Reference
                  P 
                  Ryan, S Resino, P Miralles, and others. Insulin Resistance Impairs 
                  Response to Interferon Plus Ribavirin in Patients Coinfected 
                  With HIV and Hepatitis C Virus. Journal of Acquired Immune 
                  Deficiency Syndromes (Abstract) 
                  June 23, 2010 (Epub ahead of print).