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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (
type 2 diabetes
)
57,723
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although an association between diabetes and cancer was found over 100 years ago, the issue underwent different interpretations over the subsequent decades, and only modern, prospective, epidemiological cohort and case-control studies conducted in several countries have provided reliable evidence of an increased cancer risk in diabetic patients, mainly in those with
type 2 diabetes
. This risk varies according to the tumor site: it is the greatest for primary
liver cancer
, moderately elevated for pancreatic cancer, and relatively low for colorectal, endometrial, breast, and renal cancers. The cause of the association is not clear and remains the subject of different hypotheses. The most frequently cited reason is the potential effect of insulin. Found in high concentrations, due to insulin resistance in most patients with
type 2 diabetes
, this hormone is believed to express a mitogenic effect. This hypothesis needs to be confirmed in appropriately programmed prospective studies, but it may already be helpful in choosing an adequate treatment for
type 2 diabetes
to achieve optimal metabolic control with a simultaneous reduction in hyperinsulinemia, such as diet, physical exercise, metformin, and acarbose.
...
PMID:Diabetes mellitus and cancer. 1102 48
The insulin resistance-associated hepatic iron overload is the first aetiology of iron overload disorders in France. If we do not know its mechanism, the prevalence among type II diabetic patients is around 40%. Hyperferritinaemia is present in all cases, but is not specific of the diagnosis. This pathology features liver fibrosis among 10% of the patients and some cases of primary
liver cancer
have been described. Moreover, a large body of evidence favors the direct involvement of iron in the development of extra hepatic neoplasia, while therapeutic phlebotomy to maintain low to normal body iron stores can prevent all known complications of insulin resistance-associated hepatic iron overload. In addition, treatment of
type II diabetes mellitus
and other features of insulin resistance syndrome is essential. In conclusion, it is important to detect this syndrome during
type II diabetes mellitus
.
...
PMID:[Should the insulin resistance associated with hepatic iron overload be researched during diabetes mellitus type II?]. 1244 73
The management of chronic viral hepatitis has changed significantly with the availability of effective antiviral agents. There is now a high probability that timely intervention can arrest development of cirrhosis, thereby preventing mortality from portal hypertension, liver failure and
liver cancer
. This two-part review discusses the implications of this new era of antiviral therapy for physicians. The present review is about chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV); a similar review that considers the treatment of hepatitis B virus will be published in a later issue of the Internal Medicine Journal. Chronic HCV infection is common, but fibrotic progression of liver disease is slow and variable; many infected persons never develop cirrhosis. Case selection for antiviral therapy is crucial. The most effective therapy is a pegylated (long-acting) interferon with ribavirin. Sustained viral response (SVR) (absent viraemia 6 months after completing treatment) can be obtained in 40-60% of individuals infected with genotype 1 and in approximately 67% with genotype 4 after 12 months of treatment. Response rates are higher (75-85%) with genotypes 2 and 3 after only 6 months of treatment. Late relapse is negligible after SVR. This viral cure reverses hepatic fibrosis, reduces the risk of liver failure and of hepato-cellular carcinoma. Combination therapy requires a supportive setting to minimize the impact of side-effects and maximize therapeutic effectiveness. Overall management of HCV-infected persons must also embrace measures to improve quality of life by preventing or dealing with psychosocial issues and advocating lifestyle changes to counter comorbidity from alcohol, central obesity and insulin resistance. These latter factors favour fibrotic disease progression, complications of cirrhosis (such as hepatocellular carcinoma) and development of
type 2 diabetes
mellitus, as well as eroding the chances of SVR with antiviral therapy.
...
PMID:Management of chronic hepatitis C virus infection: a new era of disease control. 1522 94
Risk of development of some gastrointestinal tract cancers (colorectal cancer, pancreas cancer and
liver cancer
) is higher in type II diabetics. Another important risk factor is obesity (for gall bladder cancer in women and in men also for stomach and esophageal cancer). Pathogenetic factors have been explored especially in colorectal cancer (diet, hyperinsulinaemia, metabolic receptors activation, absence of physical activity). Our Czech study also proved up to 4 times increased risk of colorectal cancer in diabetics and, in accordance with literature, probable influence of persistent diabetes on tumour development.
Type II diabetes mellitus
should be considered as a risk factor especially for colorectal cancer,
liver cancer
, and pancreas cancer. In type I diabetics no risk of gastrointestinal tract cancers was proved.
...
PMID:[Gastrointestinal tract cancer and diabetes mellitus]. 1530 38
Although the target of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is the liver, it has become progressively more evident that HCV can induce diseases in numerous organs. Recently, much attention has been drawn to metabolic disorders in HCV infection. Initially, hepatic steatosis and disturbances in lipid metabolism were found to be characteristic of HCV infection, and, subsequently, a correlation was noted between HCV infection and diabetes. It is now evident that HCV, by itself, can induce insulin resistance by way of disturbing the intracellular signaling pathway of insulin by the function of HCV core protein. Insulin resistance, caused by HCV infection, evolves to
type 2 diabetes
when superimposed on a high-fat diet and obesity. The fact that HCV infection induces insulin resistance by the virus itself may influence the progression of chronic hepatitis and open up novel therapeutic approaches. When hepatitis C is compared with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), there are a number of similarities and several differences. From the metabolic aspect, hepatitis C resembles NASH in numerous features, such as the presence of steatosis, serum dyslipidemia, and oxidative stress in the liver, suggesting that hepatitis C is a steatohepatitis. In contrast, there are noticeable differences between hepatitis C and NASH, in that HCV modulates cellular gene expression and intracellular signal transduction, including the activation of mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase and transcription factor activator protein (AP)-1, while such details have not been noted for NASH. This difference may explain the markedly higher incidence of
HCC
development in chronic hepatitis C compared with that in NASH. HCV infection needs to be viewed not only as a liver disease but also as a metabolic disease, and this viewpoint could open up a novel way to the molecular understanding of the pathogenesis of hepatitis C, as a virus-associated steatohepatitis (VASH).
...
PMID:Metabolic aspects of hepatitis C viral infection: steatohepatitis resembling but distinct from NASH. 1586 69
Non-alcoholic liver steatosis is associated with metabolic syndrome and
type 2 diabetes
. The prevalence of this condition in
type 2 diabetes
is estimated to be between 28 and 55%. Non-alcoholic liver steatosis is not a benign disease because of its potential progression to liver fibrosis, cirrhosis and cancer. The Verona diabetes study, a population-based observational study, on 7148 type 2 diabetic patients after 5 years of follow-up has reported an increased risk of death from gastrointestinal diseases, particularly from chronic liver cirrhosis. Moreover, in the same population after 10 years of follow-up a higher risk of mortality from
liver cancer
was observed and this risk increased significantly in obese patients (body mass index >30 kg/m2). Of note is that obese diabetic patients suffer an even higher prevalence of non-alcoholic liver steatosis. In conclusion, the Verona diabetes study showed an increased risk of mortality from liver cirrhosis and
liver cancer
in type 2 diabetic patients. Diverse pathophysiological mechanisms can be responsible, i.e. higher alcohol consumption, hepatitis and others but, considering the high prevalence of non-alcoholic liver steatosis in these patients, it is plausible to hypothesize that non-alcoholic liver steatosis may play a significant role in predisposing the liver of diabetics to chronic diseases.
...
PMID:Review article: type 2 diabetes and chronic liver disease in the Verona diabetes study. 1622 67
This study aimed to elucidate the relationship of
type 2 diabetes
, other known risk factors, and primary hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in countries with a high prevalence of hepatitis infection. We followed a prospective cohort of 54,979 subjects who participated in the Keelung Community-Based Integrated Screening program between 1999 and 2002. A total of 5,732 subjects with
type 2 diabetes
cases were identified at enrollment on the basis of fasting blood glucose level, and a total of 138 confirmed HCC cases were identified either through two-stage
liver cancer
screening or linkage with the National Cancer Registry. The independent effect of
type 2 diabetes
on the incidence of HCC and the interaction between
type 2 diabetes
and hepatitis infection or lipids profile were assessed using the Cox proportional hazards regression model. After controlling for age, sex, hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis C virus (HCV), smoking, and alcohol consumption, the association between
type 2 diabetes
and incidence of HCC (excluding 33 prevalent cases identified at enrollment) was modified by HCV status and cholesterol level. The associations were only statistically significant (adjusted hazard ratio [HR] = 2.08 [1.03-4.18]) for being HCV negative and for having hypercholesterolemia (adjusted HR = 2.81 [1.20-6.55]). These statistically significant findings remained even excluding cases of diabetes newly diagnosed at enrollment. In conclusion, in an area with a high prevalence of hepatitis virus infection,
type 2 diabetes
increases the risk of developing HCC in those who are HCV negative or have a high level of total cholesterol.
...
PMID:Type 2 diabetes and hepatocellular carcinoma: A cohort study in high prevalence area of hepatitis virus infection. 1713 79
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) covers a wide spectrum of liver pathology--from steatosis alone, through the necroinflammatory disorder of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) to cirrhosis and
liver cancer
. NAFLD/NASH is mostly related with visceral adiposity, obesity,
type 2 diabetes
melitus (DM t.2) and metabolic syndrome. Pathogenetic concepts of NAFLD include overnutrition and underactivity, insulin resistance (IR) and genetic factor. The prevalence of NAFLD has been estimated to be 17-33% in some countries, NASH may be present in about 1/3 of such cases, while 20-25% of NASH cases could progress to cirrhosis. NAFLD is now recognized as one of the most frequent reason of liver tests elevation without clinical symptoms. Insulin resistance is considering as having a central role in NAFLD pathogenesis. In hepatocytes, IR is related to hyperglycaemia and hyperinsulinaemia, formation of advanced glycation end-products, increased free fatty acids and their metabolites, oxidative stress and altered profiles of adipocytokines. Early stages of fatty liver are clinically silent and include elevation of ALT and GGTP, hyperechogenic liver in USG and/or hepatomegaly. Among clinical symptoms, abdominal discomfort is relatively common as well as chronic fatigue. NAFLD/NASH is not a benign disease, progressive liver biopsy have shown histological progression of fibrosis in 32%, the estimated rate of cirrhosis development is 20% and a liver--related death is 12% over 10 years. No treatment has scientifically proved to ameliorate NAFLD or to avoid its progression. The various therapeutic alternatives are aimed at interfering with the risk factors involved in the pathogenesis of the disorder in order to prevent the progression to end-stage liver disease. The most important therapeutic measure is increasing insulin sensitivity by an attempt to change a lifestyle mostly by dieting and physical activity in order to loose weight. The most used agent is metformin, the others are under controlled trials or their effectiveness is low. NASH is not a common indication for liver transplantation because of the older age distribution of patients and high prevalence of comorbidity, related to metabolic syndrome. Recurence of NASH in the grafted liver is also a relatively frequent complication.
...
PMID:[Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease--new view]. 1870 46
Numerous epidemiological studies have evaluated the association between coffee consumption and risk of
type 2 diabetes
, coronary heart disease, and various cancers. This paper briefly reviews the evidence for a relation between coffee consumption and these conditions, with particular attention to methodological issues. Several early studies suggested that coffee consumption could result in a marked increase in risk of coronary heart disease and several types of cancer. However, more recent prospective cohort studies that are less prone to selection and information bias have not confirmed these findings. High consumption of unfiltered types of coffee, such as French press and boiled coffee, has been shown to increase low-density-lipoprotein-cholesterol concentrations. In addition, limiting caffeinated coffee intake during pregnancy seems a prudent choice. However, evidence has been accumulating that frequent consumption of coffee may reduce risk of
type 2 diabetes
and
liver cancer
. Further experimental studies are warranted to elucidate the underlying mechanisms and possibly identify the components in coffee that are responsible for these putative effects. In sum, the currently available evidence on coffee and risk of cardiovascular diseases and cancer is largely reassuring, and suggests that, for the general population, addressing other health-related behaviors has priority for the prevention of chronic diseases.
...
PMID:Coffee consumption and risk of type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, and cancer. 1908 89
Type 2 diabetes mellitus
(DM2) has been associated with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) development. To study this relationship, we enrolled 465 HCC patients compared with 618 Cirrhotic cases and 490 Controls. The prevalence of DM2 is significantly higher in HCC patients with an Odds Ratio of 3.12 versus Controls. In HCC cases with alcohol abuse, the frequency of DM2 is the highest. In our HCC patients, when HCV infection is associated with alcohol abuse, the
liver cancer
develops earlier. In addition, multivariate analysis shows that alcohol consumption is an independent risk factor for HCC more relevant than HCV infection.
...
PMID:Alcohol and HCV chronic infection are risk cofactors of type 2 diabetes mellitus for hepatocellular carcinoma in Italy. 2061 35
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