| Literature DB >> 27920470 |
Ivana Mikolasevic1, Sandra Milic1, Tamara Turk Wensveen1, Ivana Grgic1, Ivan Jakopcic1, Davor Stimac1, Felix Wensveen1, Lidija Orlic1.
Abstract
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is one of the most common comorbidities associated with overweight and metabolic syndrome (MetS). Importantly, NAFLD is one of its most dangerous complications because it can lead to severe liver pathologies, including fibrosis, cirrhosis and hepatic cellular carcinoma. Given the increasing worldwide prevalence of obesity, NAFLD has become the most common cause of chronic liver disease and therefore is a major global health problem. Currently, NAFLD is predominantly regarded as a hepatic manifestation of MetS. However, accumulating evidence indicates that the effects of NAFLD extend beyond the liver and are negatively associated with a range of chronic diseases, most notably cardiovascular disease (CVD), diabetes mellitus type 2 (T2DM) and chronic kidney disease (CKD). It is becoming increasingly clear that these diseases are the result of the same underlying pathophysiological processes associated with MetS, such as insulin resistance, chronic systemic inflammation and dyslipidemia. As a result, they have been shown to be independent reciprocal risk factors. In addition, recent data have shown that NAFLD actively contributes to aggravation of the pathophysiology of CVD, T2DM, and CKD, as well as several other pathologies. Thus, NAFLD is a direct cause of many chronic diseases associated with MetS, and better detection and treatment of fatty liver disease is therefore urgently needed. As non-invasive screening methods for liver disease become increasingly available, detection and treatment of NAFLD in patients with MetS should therefore be considered by both (sub-) specialists and primary care physicians.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular disease; Chronic kidney disease; Diabetes mellitus type 2; Metabolic syndrome; Multisystem disease; Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27920470 PMCID: PMC5116593 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v22.i43.9488
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1007-9327 Impact factor: 5.742
Principal retrospective studies of cardiovascular diseases mortality and morbidity risk in patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (published in the past 10 years)
| Ekstedt et al[ | Retrospective; Hospital-based | 129 | Histological | 13.7 | Matched for gender, age and country | NASH subjects (not those with simple steatosis) had higher rates of all-cause, CVD and liver-related mortality than the general population |
| Stepanova et al[ | Retrospective; Population-based | 289 | Histological | 6.25 | No adjustments made | Higher risk of liver-related mortality in NASH than non-NASH. NAFLD and type II diabetes had the highest risk for overall and liver-related mortality |
| Ekstedt et al[ | Retrospective; Community-based | 229 | Histological | 26.4 | NAFLD patients had increased risk of death, with a high risk of death from CVD and liver-related disease | |
| Fibrosis stage predicted all-cause, CVD and liver-related death | ||||||
| Rafiq et al[ | Retrospective; Hospital-based | 173 | Histological | 13 | No adjustments made | Higher liver-related mortality but no difference in overall mortality (NASH |
| Soderberg et al[ | Retrospective; Hospital-based | 118 | Histological | 18 | Matched for gender, age and year | Increased total mortality in NAFLD was predominantly CV-related compared with matched reference population |
| Dunn et al[ | Retrospective cohort | 2343 | Computed tomography | 5 | No significant association was found between NAFLD and risk of all-cause mortality and cause-specific | |
| (CVD, cancer and liver) mortality and morbidity. NAFLD patients | ||||||
| (steatosis > 30% on imaging) averaged 8 yr younger than those without NAFLD |
NAFLD: Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease; CVD: Cardiovascular diseases; NASH: Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis.
Principal prospective studies of cardiovascular diseases mortality and morbidity risk in patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (published in the past 10 years)
| Targher et al[ | Prospective; Hospital-based | 2013 | Ultrasound | 6.5 | Gender, age, BMI, smoking status, diabetes duration, alcohol consumption, BP, HbA1c, TG, HDL, LDL cholesterol, GGT, use of medications (anti-hyperglycemic, antihypertensive, lipid-lowering, or anti-platelet drugs), and metabolic syndrome | NAFLD was independently associated with increased risk of nonfatal CVD events and CVD mortality |
| Hamaguch et al[ | Prospective; Community-based | 1637 | Ultrasound | 5.0 | Gender, age, BMI, smoking, alcohol consumption, BP, TG, HDL, LDL cholesterol, MetS | NAFLD was independently associated with increased risk of nonfatal CVD events |
| Haring et al[ | Prospective; Community-based | 4160 | Ultrasound | 7.3 | Gender, age, WC, diabetes, alcohol consumption, BP, physical activity, education level, civil status, equalized income, and Functional Co-morbidity Index | NAFLD was independently associated with increased risk of all-cause and CVD mortality in men |
| Wong et al[ | Prospective; Hospital-based | 612 | Ultrasound | 1.8 | Gender, age, BMI, WC, smoking status, diabetes, alcohol consumption, BP, fasting glucose, ALT, TG, HDL, LDL cholesterol, creatinine | NAFLD was independently associated with an increased prevalence of CVD at baseline, but there was no significant association between NAFLD and risk of incident CVD events |
| Lazo et al[ | Prospective; Population-based | 11371 | Ultrasound | 14.3 | Gender, age, ethnicity, BMI, education, smoking status, BP, alcohol consumption, physical activity, hypercholesterolemia diabetes | Independent increased risk of CVD but no significant association between NAFLD and all-cause and cause-specific (CVD, cancer and liver) mortality |
| Stepanova et al[ | ||||||
| Zhou et al[ | Prospective; Community-based | 3324 | Ultrasound | 4.0 | No adjustment made | Patients with NAFLD had about 3-fold higher rates of all-cause and CVD mortality than those without NAFLD |
| Treeprasertsuk et al[ | Prospective; Community-based | 309 | Ultrasound/CT | 11.5 | Gender, age | Framingham risk score accurately predicted the higher 10-yr CAD risk in NAFLD patients and was the only variable significantly associated with the risk of developing new onset CVD events |
| Kim et al[ | Prospective; Population-based | 11154 | Ultrasound and advanced fibrosis score systems | 14.5 | Gender, age, ethnicity, education, income, diabetes, BP, history of CVD, lipid-lowering medication, smoking status, WC, alcohol consumption, caffeine consumption, total and HDL cholesterol, transferrin saturation, and CRP | NAFLD was not associated with increased all-cause mortality. However, NAFLD with advanced hepatic fibrosis was independently associated with increased risk of all-cause mortality. Increase in mortality was almost entirely from CVD causes |
NAFLD: Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease; BMI: Body mass index; BP: Blood pressure; TG: Triglycerides; GGT: Gamma-glutamyl transferase; MetS: Metabolic syndrome; WC: Waist circumference; ALT: Alanine aminotransferase; CRP: C-reactive protein; CVD: Cardiovascular diseases; NASH: Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis.
Figure 1Pathophysiological mechanisms linking obesity, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, cardiovascular disease, chronic kidney disease and diabetes mellitus type 2. NAFLD: Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease; RAAS: Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system.