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©The Author(s) 2022.
World J Hepatol. Jul 27, 2022; 14(7): 1291-1306
Published online Jul 27, 2022. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v14.i7.1291
Published online Jul 27, 2022. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v14.i7.1291
Table 1 Characteristics of diabetes in patients with cirrhosis that favour a diagnosis of hepatogenous diabetes over type-2 diabetes mellitus
Following characteristics favour a diagnosis of HD |
Occurrence after the onset of liver cirrhosis |
Low prevalence of metabolic risk factors1 or a family history of DM |
Normal fasting glycemia but abnormal oral glucose tolerance test |
Low prevalence of microvascular complications, such as diabetic retinopathy |
Associated with higher levels of hyperinsulinemia, insulin resistance, and an increased risk of hypoglycemia due to high glycemic variability |
Higher association with the severity of liver cirrhosis and liver related complications |
Remission after a liver transplantation |
Table 2 Reported prevalence rates of hepatogenous diabetes in patients with liver cirrhosis
Ref. | Patients (n) | Diagnostic method | HD, n (%) | IGT, n (%) |
Holstein et al[31] | 35 | OGTT | 20 (57) | 13 (37) |
Tietge et al[114] | 100 | OGTT | 35 (35)1 | 38 (38) |
Nishida et al[25] | 46 | OGTT | 21 (38)1 | 13 (23) |
García-Compeán et al[30] | 130 | OGTT | 28 (21.5) | 36 (38.5) |
Jeon et al[29] | 195 | OGTT | 108 (55.4) | 169 (86.7) |
Ramachandran et al[23] | 202 | Clinical history2 | 59 (29.2) | NS |
Wang et al[22] | 207 | Clinical history2 | 33 (15.97) | NS |
Vasepalli et al[28] | 121 | OGTT | 52 (42.9) | 58 (47.9) |
Table 3 Studies depicting clinical impact of diabetes mellitus/hepatogenous diabetes in patients with liver cirrhosis
Ref. | Design | n | Main outcomes/remarks |
Bianchi et al[112] | Retro-prospective | 354 | 5 yr survival: 41% with DM and 56% without DM (P = 0.005) |
Holstein et al[31] | Prospective cohort | 52 | 51% of HD patients died within median of 5.7 yr after diagnosis of DM. Remark: No data on non-diabetic control |
Moreau et al[136] | Prospective cohort | 75 | Survival in patients with and without DM: 18% and 58%, respectively |
Sigal et al[97] | Cross-sectional | 65 | Incidence and severity of HE was higher in diabetics and DM was an independent risk factor for HE (P = 0.0008). Remark: study involved only HCV cirrhosis |
Nishida et al[25] | Prospective cohort | 56 | 5 yr survival was 94%, 68% and 56%, with NGT, IGT and DM, respectively |
Tietge et al[114] | Case-control study | 100 | Pre-transplant IGT or DM was risk factor for post-LT DM. Remark: Only 31 patients were prospectively evaluated |
Jeon et al[29] | Prospective cohort | 195 | HD correlated significantly with HVPG and VH. Post-prandial hyperglycemia correlation with risk of VH in 6 mo |
García-Compeán et al[113] | Prospective cohort | 100 | 5 yr cumulated survival was lower in IGT patients than NGT (31.7% vs 71.6%, P = 0.02) |
Elkrief et al[106] | Retrospective cohort | 348 | DM was independently associated with ascites, infections, HE, HCC and mortality. Remarks: Only HCV cirrhosis studied |
Yang et al[104] | Prospective cohort | 146 | DM was among independent predictors of VH (OR = 4.90) |
Jepsen et al[98] | Database analysis | 863 | Diabetic patients had a higher episode of first-time overt HE and HE progression beyond grade 2 than non-diabetics. Remarks: Original trials used vaptan which could be a confounder |
Khafaga et al[137] | Prospective case-control | 60 | Proportion of VH (46.4% vs 10%), HE (36% vs 10%) and mortality (16.6% vs 6.7%) was higher among diabetics compared to non-diabetic LC |
Qi et al[105] | Retrospective | 145 | In-hospital mortality was 20.6% in diabetics and 4.3% in nondiabetics (P = 0.003) |
Hoehn et al[116] | Retrospective | 12442 | Diabetic recipients had longer hospitalization (10 vs 9 d) and higher peri-transplant mortality (5% vs 4%) |
Yang et al[110] | Retrospective cohort | 739 | DM increased the risk of HCC in non-HCV cirrhosis (HR = 2.1) |
Routhu et al[100] | Retrospective cohort | 895 | DM was an independent predictor of HE |
Ramachandran et al[23] | Prospective cohort | 222 | HD patients had higher incidence of gall stones (27% vs 13%) and urinary infection (28% vs 7%), compared to those without DM |
Tergast et al[108] | Prospective | 475 | DM patients had an increased risk for SBP (HR = 1.51), especially when HbA1c values ≥ 6.4% |
Wang et al[22] | Retrospective | 207 | Rebleeding rate following variceal endotherapy was higher (approximately 5 times) in diabetics, including HD, than non-diabetics at 1, 3, and 6 mo |
Rosenblatt et al[109] | Retrospective (National database) | 906559 | Uncontrolled DM was associated with an increased risk of bacterial infection (OR = 1.33) and death (OR = 1.62) |
Labenz et al[138] | Prospective cohort s | 240 | DM was independently associated with covert HE. The risk of HE and overt HE was more pronounced when HbA1c ≥ 6.5% |
Table 4 Factors that might influence selection of antidiabetic medication for hepatogenous diabetes
Condition | Antidiabetic drug with pros and cons | Preferences |
Obesity | Metformin, SGLT2i, and GLP-1 agonists promote weight loss; DPP-4 inhibitors are weight neutral; Sulfonylureas, Pioglitazone, and Insulin promote weight gain | Should be preferred; May be considered; Consider alternative |
Sarcopenia | Metformin and TZD appears to have favorable effect on muscles mass; SGLT2 inhibitors, SUs (especially glibenclamide and glinides) may increase the risk of sarcopenia | Should be preferred; Consider alternative |
Hyperammonemia/Recurrent HE | Metformin and AGIs cause reduction of blood ammonia levels and risk of HE | May be preferred |
Renal impairment | Insulin and linagliptin appear to be safe; SGLT-2 inhibitors may be considered with dose modification. It has added diuretic advantage; Metformin increases the risk of lactic acidosis | Should be preferred; May be considered; Should be avoided |
Hypoglycemia | Insulin in SU have high risk of hypoglycaemia; Metformin, PZD, DPP4i and SGLT2 inhibitors have low risk of hypoglycaemia | Should be avoided; May be considered |
LC with dysplastic liver lesion/high serum AFP | Metformin decreases the risk of HCC; DPP4 inhibitors and pioglitazone inhibit HCC development in experimental model; Insulin increases risk of HCC | Should be preferred; May be consider; Should be avoided |
- Citation: Kumar R, García-Compeán D, Maji T. Hepatogenous diabetes: Knowledge, evidence, and skepticism. World J Hepatol 2022; 14(7): 1291-1306
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1948-5182/full/v14/i7/1291.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4254/wjh.v14.i7.1291