Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (hepatitis)
30,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The study aimed to evaluate the immune response to a recombinant hepatitis B vaccine in young patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM), in view of reports of reduced efficacy in adults with IDDM. Sixty-five young people with IDDM, age 4.5 to 27.5 and diabetes duration 0.3 to 19 years and 174 age- and sex-matched healthy subjects were injected with a recombinant hepatitis B vaccine at 0, 1 and 6 months intramuscularly in the deltoid region. Three (4.6%) IDDM patients and 2 (1.1%) controls were non-responders (HBsAb titre, < 2 IU l-1) and 1 control was a low responder (HBsAb titre = 10 IU l-1). Among the 3 non-responder IDDM subjects, 2 had other autoimmune disease. Median HBsAb titre was similar in responding patients (120 IU l-1 and controls (125 IU l-1). There were no significant correlations between antibody titre and age, diabetes duration, HbA1c or insulin requirement. No association was found between HBsAb titre and any HLA genotype or the presence of microangiopathy. IDDM does not adversely affect the immune response to a recombinant hepatitis B vaccine in children, adolescents, and young adults, who can thus expect to benefit from its use in situations of risk of contracting hepatitis.
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PMID:Successful immune response to a recombinant hepatitis B vaccine in young patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 884 96

Interferon (IFN)-alpha is used for the treatment of chronic viral hepatitis. It has been associated with various forms of autoimmune disease, e.g. autoimmune hepatitis, Hashimoto thyroiditis and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Further, an increase of insulin resistance and development of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus has been described after treatment with IFN-alpha. Several studies have investigated the induction of different autoimmune markers by IFN-alpha, but only few specified patients who developed insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. We report the case of a 37-year-old man with chronic hepatitis C who was treated with IFN-alpha plus ribavirin. Thirty weeks after the start of treatment, the patient developed insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and therapy was withdrawn. HLA typing showed an HLA-DR1,3 phenotype. At manifestation of diabetes mellitus, the C-peptide level was 0.37 ng/ml (normal range 0.5-3 ng/ml). The patient had a positive family history for type 2 diabetes. Several autoimmune markers were investigated before, during and 6 months after withdrawal of antiviral treatment. High titres of glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) antibodies were present before therapy. A significant increase in titres of islet cell antibodies, parietal cell antibodies and sperm antibodies was present after 14 weeks of IFN-alpha treatment. Six months after withdrawal of IFN-alpha therapy, these antibodies had significantly decreased whereas GAD antibodies remained unchanged. There was no clinical sign of any other autoimmune disease. Our data show that, in patients with a predisposition to insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, the disease may become manifest as a side-effect during therapy with IFN-alpha. Several pathogenetic factors may be involved in this process, and, in addition to IFN-alpha, hepatitis C itself may induce autoimmune mechanisms. We conclude that screening for autoantibodies specific for type 1 diabetes should be performed before the start of IFN-alpha treatment. In patients found to be at increased risk of developing diabetes mellitus type 1, monitoring of titres of these antibodies during therapy could help to assess the individual risk-benefit ratio of IFN-alpha treatment.
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PMID:Development of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in a patient with chronic hepatitis C during therapy with interferon-alpha. 1129 53

Over a 15-yr period of observation, among the 205 children who underwent liver transplantations, one of them developed a particular type of late graft dysfunction with clinical and histological similarity to autoimmune hepatitis. The patient had alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency and did not previously have autoimmune hepatitis or any other autoimmune disease before transplantation. Infectious and surgical complications were excluded. After repeated episodes of unexplained fluctuations of liver function tests and liver biopsies demonstrating reactive or a biliary pattern, without any corresponding alteration of percutaneous cholangiography, a liver-biopsy sample taken 4 yr after the transplant showed active chronic hepatitis progressing to cirrhosis, portal lymphocyte aggregates, and a large number of plasma cells. At that time, autoantibodies (gastric parietal cell antibody, liver-kidney microsomal antibody, and anti-hepatic cytosol) were positive and serum IgG levels were high. Based on these findings of autoimmune disease, a diagnosis of 'de novo autoimmune hepatitis' was made. The treatment consisted of reducing the dose of cyclosporine, reintroduction of corticosteroids, and addition of mycophenolate mofetil. After 19 months of treatment, a new liver-biopsy sample showed marked reduction of portal and lobular inflammatory infiltrate, with regression of fibrosis and of the architectural disruption. At that time, serum autoantibodies became negative. The last liver-biopsy sample showed inactive cirrhosis and disappearance of interface hepatitis and of plasma cell infiltrate. Presently, 9 yr after the transplantation, the patient is doing well, with normal liver function tests and no evidence of cirrhosis. Her immunosuppressive therapy consists of tacrolimus, mycophenolate mofetil, and prednisolone. In conclusion, the present case demonstrates that de novo autoimmune hepatitis can appear in liver-transplant patients despite appropriate anti-rejection immunosuppression, and triple therapy with tacrolimus, mycophenolate mofetil, and prednisolone could sustain the graft and prevent retransplantation.
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PMID:Successful treatment of de novo autoimmune hepatitis and cirrhosis after pediatric liver transplantation. 1667 64