Publication: Caucasian lean subjects with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease share long-term prognosis of non-lean: time for reappraisal of BMI-driven approach?
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Identifiers
Date
2022-1-11
Authors
Younes, Ramy
Govaere, Olivier
Petta, Salvatore
Miele, Luca
Tiniakos, Dina
Burt, Alastair
David, Ezio
Vecchio, Fabio Maria
Maggioni, Marco
Cabibi, Daniela
Advisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
BMJ Group
Abstract
The full phenotypic expression of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) in lean subjects is incompletely characterised. We aimed to investigate prevalence, characteristics and long-term prognosis of Caucasian lean subjects with NAFLD. The study cohort comprises 1339 biopsy-proven NAFLD subjects from four countries (Italy, UK, Spain and Australia), stratified into lean and non-lean (body mass index (BMI) Lean patients represented 14.4% of the cohort and were predominantly of Italian origin (89%). They had less severe histological disease (lean vs non-lean: non-alcoholic steatohepatitis 54.1% vs 71.2% p10 483 person-years), 4.7% of lean vs 7.7% of non-lean patients reported liver-related events (p=0.37). No difference in survival was observed compared with non-lean NAFLD (p=0.069). Caucasian lean subjects with NAFLD may progress to advanced liver disease, develop metabolic comorbidities and experience cardiovascular disease (CVD) as well as liver-related mortality, independent of longitudinal progression to obesity and PNPLA3 genotype. These patients represent one end of a wide spectrum of phenotypic expression of NAFLD where the disease manifests at lower overall BMI thresholds. NAFLD may affect and progress in both obese and lean individuals. Lean subjects are predominantly males, have a younger age at diagnosis and are more prevalent in some geographic areas. During the follow-up, lean subjects can develop hepatic and extrahepatic disease, including metabolic comorbidities, in the absence of weight gain. These patients represent one end of a wide spectrum of phenotypic expression of NAFLD.
Description
MeSH Terms
Body Mass Index
Female
Male
Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
Survival Rate
White People
Female
Male
Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
Survival Rate
White People
DeCS Terms
Hígado
Pacientes
Genotipo
Enfermedades cardiovasculares
Pronóstico
Diagnóstico
Enfermedad del hígado graso no alcohólico
Hígado graso alcohólico
Hepatopatías
Mortalidad
Biopsia
Pacientes
Genotipo
Enfermedades cardiovasculares
Pronóstico
Diagnóstico
Enfermedad del hígado graso no alcohólico
Hígado graso alcohólico
Hepatopatías
Mortalidad
Biopsia
CIE Terms
Keywords
fatty liver, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, Adult, Cohort Studies, Humans, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Thinness
Citation
Younes R, Govaere O, Petta S, Miele L, Tiniakos D, Burt A, et al. Caucasian lean subjects with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease share long-term prognosis of non-lean: time for reappraisal of BMI-driven approach? Gut. 2022 Feb;71(2):382-390.