Background: The histological outcome of chronic hepatitis C is better among carriers of the apolipoprotein E (ApoE) epsilon4 allele, for reasons unknown. The orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) setting allows to separate the role played by liver-derived ApoE (graft) from ApoE of different origin (recipient).
Patients and methods: Forty-six OLT recipients with recurrent hepatitis C were studied. Grafts and recipients were genotyped for ApoE. In a follow-up extending up to 4 years, the serum triglycerides-to-cholesterol ratio (T/C ratio) was measured 1 year after OLT, whereas fibrosis progression was assessed yearly and expressed as fibrosis units/month (FU/mo).
Results: A T/C ratio < or =0.75 was observed in 13/15 cases in which both donor and recipient were epsilon4 carriers, 10/19 cases in which epsilon4 alleles were of exclusive recipient's origin and 5/12 cases in which epsilon4 alleles were of exclusive donor's origin or absent (P<0.02). One year after OLT, a fibrosis progression < or =0.100 FU/mo was associated with a low T/C ratio (24/34 vs. 4/12, P<0.05). An Ishak staging score >2 was reached later by male recipients who were epsilon4 carriers (P<0.002).
Conclusions: Recipient's carriage of ApoE epsilon4 affects fibrosis progression of recurrent hepatitis C through gender-specific mechanisms, associated with a peculiar, ApoE-associated, lipid profile.