Surprising findings about Hepatitis C and insulin resistance
We have known for several years that Hepatitis C, a common cause of
liver cirrhosis and cancer, also makes people three to four times more
likely to develop Type 2 diabetes.
In studying the insulin resistance of 29 people with Hepatitis C,
Australian researchers have confirmed that they have high insulin
resistance, a precursor to diabetes. However, almost all insulin
resistance occurs in muscle, with little or none in the liver, a very
surprising finding given that Hepatitis C is a liver disease.
Dr Kerry Lee Milner and Professor Don Chisholm from Sydney’s Garvan
Institute of Medical Research, in collaboration with Professor Jacob
George from the Storr Liver Unit, University of Sydney at Westmead
Hospital, have published their study in the prestigious international
journal, Gastroenterology, now online.
Insulin, a hormone made by the pancreas, helps the body use glucose for
energy. The two most important organs that respond to insulin are the
liver and muscle. A healthy liver responds to insulin by not producing
glucose, while healthy muscle responds by using glucose. An insulin
resistant liver produces unwanted glucose, while insulin resistant
muscle cannot absorb it from the bloodstream, leading to high levels of
sugar in the blood.
“Contrary to all expectations, not only did we find no significant
insulin resistance in the liver of the patients in the study, half of
them suffered from a strain of Hepatitis C that causes about three
times the normal level of fat to accumulate in the liver,” said
Professor Chisholm.
“The fifteen people with very high levels of fat in the liver had the
same degree of insulin resistance as the fourteen that didn’t have
fatty livers.”
“A number of important investigators around the world have been arguing
that fat in the liver is an extremely important determinant of insulin
resistance, perhaps the most important. At least in this context, we’ve
shown that not to be the case.”
“Before you get Type 2 diabetes, you must become insulin resistant and
your insulin producing cells must also fail to compensate. Insulin
resistance alone will not give you diabetes.”
“In our study, we gave intravenous glucose, a specific stimulus to
insulin secretion, and showed that insulin secretion was not impaired
in Hepatitis C patients compared to our control group.”
“This finding tells us that people with Hepatitis C who develop
diabetes probably have susceptible insulin-producing cells, and would
probably get it anyway – but much later in life. The extra insulin
resistance caused by Hepatitis C apparently brings on diabetes at
35 or 40, instead of 65 or 70.”
“More work now needs to be done into why Hepatitis C causes insulin
resistance in muscle. That will give us better insight into the
behaviour of the disease.”
“At this stage, it is helpful for people with Hepatitis C to understand
insulin resistance and what it can mean for them. If they have
relatives with Type 2 diabetes, they will be genetically prone to
developing it themselves and so would be advised to manage their diets
very carefully and take plenty of exercise – to slow onset.”
Notes to Editors
Hepatitis C is a blood-borne virus and in Australia is caused mainly by
drug users sharing needles, but also by unsterile tattooing or body
piercing. There is no vaccine for Hepatitis C, unlike Hepatitis A and
B.
Around 212,000 Australians suffer from chronic Hepatitis C, 80,000 -
85,000 of them in NSW. Across Australia, there are roughly 10,000 new
infections each year.
There are 6 strains of Hepatitis C – the participants in this study
were selected because they had either of two common strains in
Australia, Genotype 1 and Genotype 3. The latter strain causes
significant fat deposits in the liver.
While it is not noted in the media release above, the study observed
that the degree of insulin resistance is a negative predictor of
anti-viral treatment. In other words, the greater the insulin
resistance, the less responsive people will be to treatment.
Between 50-80% of people who are treated for Hepatitis C are
successfully treated, leaving 20-50% who do not respond. Treating with
lifestyle changes or an insulin sensitiser may reduce this percentage -
as well as delaying onset of diabetes.
The study found that predictors of insulin resistance were viral load
and subcutaneous fat. This suggests the possibility that the virus
alters either fat supply or alters the cell signalling proteins
released from subcutaneous fat, either of which could generate insulin
resistance.
ABOUT GARVAN
The Garvan Institute of Medical Research was founded in 1963.
Initially a research department of St Vincent's Hospital in Sydney, it
is now one of Australia's largest medical research institutions with
nearly 500 scientists, students and support staff. Garvan’s main
research programs are: Cancer, Diabetes & Obesity, Immunology and
Inflammation, Osteoporosis and Bone Biology, and Neuroscience. The
Garvan’s mission is to make significant contributions to medical
science that will change the directions of science and medicine and
have major impacts on human health. The outcome of Garvan’s discoveries
is the development of better methods of diagnosis, treatment, and
ultimately, prevention of disease.
MEDIA ENQUIRIES
Alison Heather
Science Communications Manager
Garvan Institute of Medical Research
+61 2 9295 8128
+61 434 071 326
a.heather “at” garvan.org.au



