Methods: In this cross-sectional study, 179 HD patients with AVFs who were referred to Van Yüzüncü Yıl University Hospital between January 2010 and December 2010 were evaluated. Data including age, sex, duration of renal failure, number of operated fistulas, number of patients with aneurysmal fistulas and chronic HCV infection were recorded. Doppler ultrasonography was performed to determine AVF patency and aneurysm flow.
Results: Thirthy-three patients (group A) had aneurysm and 21 (group A1) of these patients had chronic HCV infection, while 12 (group A2) had no chronic HCV infection. Hundred and forty-six patients (group B) had no aneurysm. Of these patients, 15 (group B1) had chronic HCV infection, while 131 (group B2) had no chronic HCV infection. There were no statistical differences in age, sex, and duration of renal failure between the groups. The mean AVF flow was higher in group A1 (856±123 ml/min) compared to group A2 (560±98 ml/min) (p<0.05). The mean AVF flow was also higher in group B1 (536±54 ml/min) compared to group B2 (373±47 ml/min) (p<0.05). Criyoglobulinemia positivity was statistically significant in aneurysmal AVFs (group A1 and A2) than nonaneurysmal AVFs (group B1 and B2) (p<0.001).
Conclusion: Our results demonstrated that aneurysm of AVFs in maintenance HD patients was associated with chronic HCV infection.
The aim of this study was to determine the possible relationship between aneurysmal AVFs and chronic HCV infection, especially in patients with MC.
In the serological testing for cryoglobulins, serum preparation was performed at 37 °C to prevent premature immune complex precipitation. The serum was then stored at 4 °C for seven days, inspected daily for a precipitate, and spun in a Wintrobe tube (ATICO Medical Pvt. Ltd., Ambala, Haryana, India) for to calculate of the cryocrit, the percentage of cryoglobulin in the serum. A cryocrit ≥2% indicated a positive result. The cryocrit was then typed using immunofixation.[18] Some chronic HCV patients with MC may be HCV Ab+ yet have undetectable plasma HCV RNA.[19] In such cases, examining the cryocrit for HCV RNA is warranted. The patients in this study with HCV and MC had serum cryoglobulin levels of over 0.05 g/lt on at least two occasions and were positive for serum HCV RNA
Statistical analyses
Statistical tests were performed using the SPSS
version 13 for Windows (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL,
USA) software program. Continous variables were
expressed as mean ± standard deviation (SD), and
either a chi-square test or Fisher’s exact test was used
for comparing percentages. In addition, Student’s
t-test was used to compare parametric measurements,
and the Mann-Whitney U test was used to compare
non-parametric measurements among the groups. A
p-value of <0.05 was interpreted as being statistically
significant.
Shichi et al.[28] found that anti-HCV antibodies have been reported in 10.6% of patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and 6.3% of those affected by dilatative cardiomyopathy, which is much higher that the rate attributed to the controls (2.4%). In addition, Ishizaka et al.[29] determined t hat there was a significantly higher prevalence of aortic atherosclerosis in patients with HCV infection, which is noteworthy and found that this association was mostly evident in cases involving active viral replication.[30] Furthermore, the high prevalence of antibodies to HCV connected with higher concentrations of HCV RNA genomic sequences in cryoglobulins suggests a correlation between MC and HCV infection and strongly supports the view that this virus plays a key role in causing vascular damage.[31,32] However, it is not clear whether this damage has an effect on AVFs with aneurysmal transformation. According to our results, the aneurysmal transformation of AVFs was higher in the HCV-infected patients, which led to the hypothesis that HCV RNA particles and/or cryoglobulinemia may disrupt the endothelial cells of fistulas in infected patients (Figures 1 and 2). Furthermore, in a 10-year follow-up of clinical studies comprised of 53 patients, Janicki et al.[33] determined that five (9.4%) developed an aneurysm. In addition, Eugster et al.,[34] followed 38 patients for 10 years, measuring their brachial artery diameters, and found an average increase of 1 cm at the end of this period. In addition, two of the patients (5.3%) developed an aneurysm. In another large study, Gharbi et al.[35] followed 4 22 patients opened 684 fistula for 39 months and have found that 11% developed aneurysm. Aneurysmal dilatation of AVFs is a known phenomenon that has not been thouroughly investigated.[36,37] The mechanisms underlying the dilatation are thought to be stress, high blood flow, and interference with the function of the vasa vasorum. Our study provided first-time evidence that the overflow of AVFs, both with or without aneurysms, can be seen in HD patients with HCV infection and that HCV infection and/or cryoglobulinemia, along with stress and vasa vasorum dysfunction, may play a role in the aneurysmal dilatation of fistulas (Figure 3).
We also demonstrated that aneurysmal AVFs and HCF infection were more predominant in males, with group B1 having more males than the other groups. In addition, the duration of functional AVF was shorter in groups A1 and B1 than in groups A1 and A2, and the opening AVF counts were also higher in the same patients. Our results also led to speculation that HCV infection has deteriorating effects on AVF patency; however, the precise mechanisms by which this occurs needs to be researched further. Moreover, the serum levels of gamma globulin were higher in groups A1 and B1. Interestingly, Arase et al.[31] found that the gamma globulin levels were higher in HCV patients with extrahepatic manifestations. We also determined that the mean value of RF was higher in the HCV (+) patients that made up groups A1 and B1 and that chronic inflammation due to this infection may provide a possible explanation for the laboratory abnormalities i n our study population.
To our knowledge, no other study in the literature has identified a link between AVF aneuryms and chronic HCV infection, but our results showed a strong correlation, leading us to postulate that AVF aneurysms are one of the deterioriating effects of HCV infection and cryoglobulinemia in the vascular endothelium. As Arase et al.[31] and Kırış et al.[32] discovered, the high prevalence of antibodies in relation to HCV along with the higher concentration of HCV RNA genomic sequences in cryoglobulins suggests a close relationship between MC and HCV infection a nd supports t he view t hat t his virus plays a key role in causing vascular damage.
A limitation of our study was that it was crosssectional and not prospective in nature. It would be interesting to assess AVF flows in HD patients along with the changes in the status of HCV and cryoglobulinemia via a long-term follow-up study and to also analyze the possible relationship of these flows with the clinical aneurysmatic fistulas in chronic renal failure patients over time.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with
respect to the authorship and/or publication of this
article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
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[Abstract]