| Literature DB >> 28526997 |
Stefano Ballestri1, Fabio Nascimbeni2,3, Enrica Baldelli4, Alessandra Marrazzo4, Dante Romagnoli5, Amedeo Lonardo5.
Abstract
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) spans steatosis through nonalcoholic steatohepatis, cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) associated with striking systemic features and excess cardiovascular and liver-related mortality. The pathogenesis of NAFLD is complex and multifactorial. Endocrine derangements are closely linked with dysmetabolic traits. For example, in animal and human studies, female sex is protected from dysmetabolism thanks to young individuals' ability to partition fatty acids towards ketone body production rather than very low density lipoprotein (VLDL)-triacylglycerol, and to sex-specific browning of white adipose tissue. Ovarian senescence facilitates both the development of massive hepatic steatosis and the fibrotic progression of liver disease in an experimental overfed zebrafish model. Consistently, estrogen deficiency, by potentiating hepatic inflammatory changes, hastens the progression of disease in a dietary model of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) developing in ovariectomized mice fed a high-fat diet. In humans, NAFLD more often affects men; and premenopausal women are equally protected from developing NAFLD as they are from cardiovascular disease. It would be expected that early menarche, definitely associated with estrogen activation, would produce protection against the risk of NAFLD. Nevertheless, it has been suggested that early menarche may confer an increased risk of NAFLD in adulthood, excess adiposity being the primary culprit of this association. Fertile age may be associated with more severe hepatocyte injury and inflammation, but also with a decreased risk of liver fibrosis compared to men and postmenopausal status. Later in life, ovarian senescence is strongly associated with severe steatosis and fibrosing NASH, which may occur in postmenopausal women. Estrogen deficiency is deemed to be responsible for these findings via the development of postmenopausal metabolic syndrome. Estrogen supplementation may at least theoretically protect from NAFLD development and progression, as suggested by some studies exploring the effect of hormonal replacement therapy on postmenopausal women, but the variable impact of different sex hormones in NAFLD (i.e., the pro-inflammatory effect of progesterone) should be carefully considered.Entities:
Keywords: Fibrosis; Hormones; Inflammation; Man; Menarche; Menopausal status; NASH; Physiopathology; Sex; Steatosis; Women
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28526997 PMCID: PMC5487879 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-017-0556-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
Gender impacts on incident and prevalent NAFLD. Evidence from longitudinal and cross-sectional studies
| Study | Method | Findings | Conclusion | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study population | Diagnosis of FL | Incidence (longitudinal studies) | Independent predictors | ||
| Kojima et al. [ | 35,519 Japanese subjects (health check-up), 65.2% M, mean age 45.8 years, F-up 12 years | US | 14.3% | M sex (OR 1.7), metabolic factors (BMI OR 6.3) | M sex and metabolic factors are independent risk factors for the incidence of NAFLD |
| Hamaguchi et al. [ | 3147 healthy Japanese (1694 M), aged 21–80 years, mean F-up 414 days | US | 10%; in M (14%) > F (5%) | Age (only in F), weight gain, and MetS | NAFLD is more incident in men than in women |
| Suzuki et al. [ | 1537 Japanese subjects (1352 M), mean age 35 years, mean F-up 60 months | AST, ALT | 31/1000 person-years | M sex overall and in subjects <40 years (HR 4.6); metabolic factors | M sex and metabolic factors are independent risk factors for the incidence of NAFLD |
| Tsuneto et al. [ | 1635 Nagasaki atomic bomb survivors (606 M), mean age 63 years, F-up 11.6 years | US | 19.9/1000 person-years (22.3 in M > 18.6 in F); M (38%) > F (25%) before 50 years | Obesity, hypertension, and high-TG (gender NS) | Gender is not an independent risk factor for incident NAFLD |
| Hamaguchi et al. [ | 1603 Japanese women, aged 21–80 years, mean F-up 414 days | US | 5% in F; in postmenopausal (6.1–7.5%) and under HRT (5.3%) > premenopausal (3.5%) | Age (only in premenopausal), weight gain, and MetS | There is a gradient in the incidence of NAFLD in women: postmenopausal > HRT > premenopausal |
| Zhou et al. [ | 507 Chinese NAFLD-free participants, median F-up 4 years | US | 9.1%; in M 7.3% > F 9.7% | Age, metabolic factors (gender NS) | Gender is not an independent risk factor for incident NAFLD |
| Zelber-Sagi et al. [ | 147 Israeli subjects, mean age 51.2 years, F-up 7 years | US | 19.0% (2.7%/year) | Weight gain and HOMA (gender NS) | Gender is not an independent risk factor for incident NAFLD |
| Sung et al. [ | 2589 Korean subjects, mean F-up 4.37 years | US | 34.7/1000 person-years; in M (23.4%) > F (9.7%) | MetS traits (gender NS) | Gender was not an independent risk factor for incident NAFLD |
| Xu et al. [ | 5562 non-obese Chinese subjects, mean age 43 years, F-up 5 years | US | 8.9% | M sex, younger age, and metabolic factors | M sex is a risk factor for the incidence of NAFLD at multivariate analysis |
| Wong et al. [ | 565 Hong Kong subjects, mean age 48 years, median F-up 47 months | 1H NMR | 3.4%/year | MetS (M sex predictor only at univariate analysis) | M sex is a risk factor for the incidence of NAFLD at univariate analysis |
| Yun et al. [ | 37,130 Korean subjects, mean age (M 39.4, F 38.6 years), 46% M, F-up 2 years | US | M (44.5/1000 person-years) > F (20.4/1000 person-years) | WC gain in both sexes | Visceral obesity strongly predicts NAFLD in either gender |
AAs African-Americans, BMI body mass index, F female/s, FL fatty liver, F-up follow-up, H MRS proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy, HOMA homeostasis model assessment, HRT hormone replacement therapy, M male/s, MetS metabolic syndrome, NA not assessed, NAFLD nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, NHANES III National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey III, NS not significant, OR odds ratio, RDW red blood cell distribution width, T2D type 2 diabetes, TG triglycerides, US ultrasound, WC waist circumference
Impact of gender on NASH/fibrosis prevalence
| Study | Method | Findings | Conclusion | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study population | Diagnosis of NASH | Prevalence | Independent predictors | ||
| Singh et al. [ | 71 consecutive Asian-Indian NASH patients, aged 9–57 years, 76.1% M | Biopsy | NA | F sex for fibrosis stage | F sex is an independent risk factor for fibrosis |
| Hossain et al. [ | 432 American NAFLD patients, mean age 43.6 years, 22.9% M | Biopsy | 26.8% NASH and 17.4% moderate-to severe fibrosis | M sex for NASH and moderate-to-severe fibrosis in addition to ethnicity, ALT, AST, metabolic factors | M gender is a strong independent risk factor for both NASH and fibrosis |
| Al-hamoudi et al. [ | 1312 Saudi Arabian inpatients, mean age 44.7 years, 51.0% M | US | 16.6% NASH (by ALT >60 U/L) | M sex, young age and low total CH predicted high ALT in NAFLD | M gender is a strong independent risk factor for hypertransaminasemic NAFLD |
| Bambha et al. [ | 1026 adults (NASH CRN Database), mean age 48.8 years, 37% M | Biopsy | 61% NASH and 29% advanced fibrosis | F sex for NASH and advanced fibrosis; increasing age for advanced fibrosis; plus metabolic factors | F sex is an independent risk factor for NASH and fibrosis |
| Younossi et al. [ | 11,613 American participants (from NHANES III) | US | 12% NASH (by grade 2–3 US-FL + high ALT, AST, and/or T2D/IR) | Younger age and metabolic factors (gender NS) | Gender is not an independent risk factor for NASH |
| Tapper et al. [ | 358 NAFLD patients, 62.9% M | Biopsy | NASH and advanced fibrosis > in F vs M (45% vs 30%; 23% vs 14%) | F sex, BMI, and ALT for NASH; age, AST, and APRI for advanced fibrosis | F sex is an independent risk factor for NASH and fibrosis |
| Wang et al. [ | 25,032 Chinese subjects (health check-up), aged 18–94 years, 62% M | US | NASH with advanced fibrosis (by BAAT score, AST/ALT) > F vs M | NA | Prevalence of NASH with advanced fibrosis is higher in F sex |
| Yang et al. [ | 541 American patients with NASH, mean age 48 years, 35.1% M | Biopsy | 100% NASH; 22% advanced fibrosis | M sex, postmenopausal F status (premenopausal F reference; borderline P), pre-T2D/T2D for fibrosis | M sex and postmenopausal status are independent risk factors for fibrosing NASH |
| Turola et al. [ | 244 females and 244 age-matched males with NAFLD | Biopsy | F2–F4 fibrosis | Menopause, metabolic factors, and NASH for F2–F4 fibrosis in F with NAFLD | Menopause is strongly associated with fibrosing NASH |
| Klair et al. [ | 488 postmenopausal NAFLD subjects | Biopsy | Advanced fibrosis 38.4% in premature menopause F vs 32.7% in other F | Premature menopause and time from menopause for advanced fibrosis (adjusted for age, race, metabolic factors) | The longer the duration of postmenopausal status the higher the risk of NASH |
| Yang et al. [ | 1112 American NAFLD patients (160 premenopausal and 489 postmenopausal F; 463 M) | Biopsy | NASH > in pre/postmenopausal F (62%) vs M (50%) | Lobular inflammation risk increased in (1) premenopausal F > M and postmenopausal F, (2) oral contraceptives and HRT users (adjusted for covariates of liver metabolic stress) | Fertile age and estrogen use may predispose to more necroinflammatory NASH variants |
ALT alanine aminotransferase, AST aspartate aminotransferase, APRI AST-to-platelet ratio index, BMI body mass index, F female/s, FL fatty liver, F-up follow-up, HRT hormone replacement therapy, M male/s, MetS metabolic syndrome, NA not assessed, NAFLD nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, NASH nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, NHANES III National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey III, NS not significant, T2D type 2 diabetes, US ultrasound, WC waist circumference, years years
Physiological role of hormones
| Men | Women | Both sexes | Obesity/type 2 diabetes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estradiol | Estradiol in men is essential for modulating libido, erectile function, and spermatogenesis [ A study conducted in healthy men suggests that estradiol protects from NAFLD [ | Endogenous estrogens are master regulators of lipid metabolism and inhibit inflammation, vascular cell growth, and plaque progression in premenopausal women [ The loss of estrogens which occurs postmenopausally is associated with a modest increase in LDL cholesterol with either no change or a small decrease in HDL cholesterol. Estrogen administration decreases LDL cholesterol and Lp(a) levels while increasing triglycerides and HDL cholesterol levels, but these effects are dependent on the dose and route of administration [ | Estrogens improve inflammation related to metabolic dysfunction (“metaflammation”). Further to a direct downregulation of inflammatory pathways, this effect is also mediated by metabolic amelioration [ | Obesity is associated with hyperestrogenism which, in turn, increases the risk of breast cancer in men [ |
| Progesterone | Progesterone has important effects in regulating male fertility by affecting the energetic homeostasis of sperm [ | Progesterone has a major role in the ovarian and menstrual cycle; moreover it exerts an immuno regulatory function; regulates the contraction of human intestinal smooth muscle cells and the motility of various human cell types [ Progesterone is an independent predictor of insulin resistance in girls [ | Progesterone has been potentially implicated as a therapeutic adjunct in many clinical conditions such as traumatic brain injury, Alzheimer’s disease, and diabetic neuropathy [ | Increasing levels of progesterone have been associated with the development of systemic insulin resistance [ Little is known regarding the role, if any, of serum progesterone in NAFLD |
| Androgens | The synthesis of testosterone is key to male fertility. A negative feedback finely regulates the secretion of hormones at the levels of hypothalamic-pituitary–gonadal axis. Congenital or acquired disturbances of this axis will lead to hypogonadism and thus impair male fertility [ | Androgens have important biological roles in young women, influencing bone and muscle mass, vascular health, cognition, mood, well-being, and libido [ However, testosterone deficiency in young women may pass underdiagnosed because of generally nonspecific symptoms and inaccuracy of testosterone measurement [ | Sarcopenia, namely the decline in muscle mass and strength which occurs with ageing, has been associated with a deficiency in both 17β-estradiol and testosterone, two sex hormones which act on satellite cells. These remain quiescent throughout life and are activated in response to stressful events, enabling them to guide repair and regeneration of the skeletal muscle [ | Obese men tend to be hypogonadic as a result of the functional suppression of the hypothalamic–pituitary–testicular axis [ |
Fig. 1Physiopathological grounds accounting for male sex as a strong predictor of NAFLD. Male gender and menopausal status have been associated with the risk of NAFLD independently of age and metabolic factors in cross-sectional studies. On the basis of human studies and extrapolation of notions from animal studies, it can be speculated that female sex is protected from dysmetabolism thanks to young individuals’ ability to partition fatty acids towards ketone body production rather than VLDL-TAG [23], and to sex-specific browning of white adipose tissue which contributes in protecting female mice from experimental NAFLD associated with methionine choline deficient diet [24]. However, after menopause women display a similar or even higher prevalence of NAFLD compared to men, supporting a protective effect of estrogens. Finally, risk factors associated with NAFLD development are different in men compared to women. TAG triacylglycerols, WAT white adipose tissue
Fig. 2Hormonal changes are a major determinant of progressive NAFLD in human menopause. NAFLD epidemiology and physiopathology are modulated by age at menarche and postmenopausal status. For example, early menarche may confer an increased risk of NAFLD in adulthood partly mediated by excess adiposity [130, 131, 133]. Moreover, ovarian senescence, via estrogen deficiency, may eventually be conducive to both massive liver steatosis and its fibrotic evolution via dysmetabolic traits including T2D, hypertriglyceridemia, and visceral obesity which are often found postmenopausally [29, 81, 135]