| Literature DB >> 31212642 |
Amedeo Lonardo1, Alessandro Mantovani2, Simonetta Lugari3, Giovanni Targher4.
Abstract
Secondary nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) defines those complex pathophysiological and clinical consequences that ensue when the liver becomes an ectopic site of lipid storage owing to reasons other than its mutual association with the metabolic syndrome. Disorders affecting gonadal hormones, thyroid hormones, or growth hormones (GH) may cause secondary forms of NAFLD, which exhibit specific pathophysiologic features and, in theory, the possibility to receive an effective treatment. Here, we critically discuss epidemiological and pathophysiological features, as well as principles of diagnosis and management of some common endocrine diseases, such as polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), hypothyroidism, hypogonadism, and GH deficiency. Collectively, these forms of NAFLD secondary to specific endocrine derangements may be envisaged as a naturally occurring disease model of NAFLD in humans. Improved understanding of such endocrine secondary forms of NAFLD promises to disclose novel clinical associations and innovative therapeutic approaches, which may potentially be applied also to selected cases of primary NAFLD.Entities:
Keywords: GH deficiency; PCOS; hypogonadism; hypothyroidism
Year: 2019 PMID: 31212642 PMCID: PMC6600657 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20112841
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Schematic representation of the putative mechanisms linking polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) with the development of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). NAFLD and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) secondary to PCOS are a unique model of endocrine liver disease featuring progressive liver disease in young women with amenorrhea.
Observational studies and meta-analyses assessing the relationship between (subclinical and overt) hypothyroidism and risk of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD; ordered by publication year and study design).
| Ref. | Study Population | Thyroid Function Tests—Definition of Hypothyroidism | NAFLD Diagnosis; Prevalence of NAFLD | Adjustments | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| [ | Case-control study: | Hypothyroidism was defined by the self-reported use of levothyroxine | Biopsy | Diabetes, dyslipidemia, hypertension | Hypothyroidism was independently associated with an increased risk of NASH |
| [ | Cross-sectional study: 878 Chinese elderly individuals | TSH, FT4, and FT3 | USG; 26% with NAFLD | Age, BMI, waist circumference, triglyceride, fasting glucose, uric acid, creatinine | FT4 levels were independently associated with an increased risk of NAFLD |
| [ | Cross-sectional study: 1322 Chinese individuals | Hypothyroidism was defined as TSH levels >2.5 mIU/L | USG; 25% with NAFLD | Age, sex, BMI, body fat, triglycerides, systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, fasting glucose | Hypothyroidism was not independently associated with an increased risk of NAFLD |
| [ | Population-based study (Study of Health in Pomerania): 3661 German individuals | Subclinical hypothyroidism was defined as TSH >3 mIU/L and normal FT4; overt hypo thyroidism was defined as TSH >3 mIU/L and FT4 <7 pmol/L | USG; 16% with NAFLD | Age, waist circumference, physical activity, alcohol intake, food intake pattern | Hypothyroidism was not independently associated with an increased risk of NAFLD. Contrariwise, serum FT4 levels were inversely associated with NAFLD |
| [ | Case-control study: 246 US patients with biopsy-proven NAFLD and 430 age-, sex-, race-, and BMI-matched controls | Hypothyroidism was defined by the self-reported use of levothyroxine | Biopsy | Alcohol use | Hypothyroidism was independently associated with an increased risk of NAFLD |
| [ | Cross-sectional study: 4648 South Korean adults | Subclinical hypothyroidism was defined as TSH ≥4.1 mIU/L and normal FT4; overt hypothyroidism was defined as FT4 <0.7 ng/dL | USG; 25% with NAFLD | Age, sex, BMI, waist circumference, lipids hypertension, diabetes | Subclinical and overt hypothyroidism were independently associated with an increased risk of NAFLD |
| [ | Prospective case-control study: 327 Chinese patients with subclinical hypothyroidism and 327 age-, sex-, and BMI-matched euthyroid controls | Subclinical hypothyroidism was defined as TSH ≥4.5 mIU/L and normal FT4 levels | USG; 15% of individuals developed NAFLD over a median follow-up of ~5 years | Waist circumference, systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, lipids, fasting glucose | Subclinical hypothyroidism was independently associated with an increased risk of NAFLD during the follow-up |
| [ | Cross-sectional study: 69 Italian euthyroid patients with biopsy-proven NAFLD | TSH | Biopsy; 44 patients had NASH, whereas 25 patients had only steatosis | Age, sex, BMI, HOMA | TSH levels were independently and positively associated with an increased risk of NASH |
| [ | Cross-sectional study: 832 Iranian healthy individuals | Subclinical hypothyroidism was defined as TSH >5.2 mIU/L and | USG; 15% with NAFLD | None | Subclinical and overt hypothyroidism were not independently associated with an increased risk of NAFLD |
| [ | Cross-sectional study: 753 Mexican adults from the Genetics of Atherosclerotic Disease study | Subclinical hypothyroidism was defined as TSH >4.5 mIU/L and normal FT4 levels | Computed tomography; 31% with NAFLD | None | Subclinical hypothyroidism was not independently associated with an increased risk of NAFLD |
| [ | Cross-sectional study: 739 Chinese euthyroid individuals | TSH, FT4 | USG; 26% with NAFLD | Age, sex, BMI, smoking status, systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, lipids, FT3 | TSH and FT4 levels were independently associated with an increased risk of NAFLD |
| [ | Cross-sectional study: 2576 euthyroid South Koreans | TSH, FT4, FT3 | USG; 38% with NAFLD | Age, sex, smoking status, hypertension, fasting glucose, lipids, creatinine, uric acid | FT3 levels, but not TSH and FT4 levels, were independently associated with an increased risk of NAFLD |
| [ | Cross-sectional study: 1154 Chinese with chronic hepatitis B | Subclinical hypothyroidism was defined as serum TSH >5.3 mUI/L and normal FT4 levels, whereas overt hypothyroidism was defined as serum FT4 level <7.9 pmol/L and TSH >5.3 mIU/L | Biopsy; 23% with NAFLD | Age, sex | TSH levels were independently and positively associated with an increased risk of NAFLD |
| [ | Case-control study: 500 biopsy-proven NAFLD Indians and 300 age-, sex-, and BMI-matched controls | Hypothyroidism was defined by the self-reported use of levothyroxine | Biopsy | Age, sex, BMI, transaminases | Hypothyroidism was independently associated with an increased risk of NAFLD |
| [ | Population-based study: 1276 Germans | Subclinical hypothyroidism was defined as TSH ≥3.4 mIU/L and normal FT4 levels; overt hypothyroidism was defined as total T4 levels <12.8 pmol/L and TSH levels ≥3.4 mIU/L | USG; 25% with NAFLD | Age, sex, BMI, waist circumference | Subclinical and overt hypothyroidism were not independently associated with an increased risk of NAFLD |
| [ | Longitudinal study: 18,544 healthy South Koreans NAFLD-free at baseline | Subclinical hypothyroidism was defined as TSH >4.2 mIU/L normal FT4 levels; overt hypothyroidism was defined as TSH >4.2 mIU/L and FT4 <0.9 ng/dL | USG; 2348 individuals developed incident NAFLD during a mean follow-up of 4 years | Age, sex, BMI, metabolic syndrome | Subclinical and overt hypothyroidism were not independently associated with an increased risk of NAFLD |
| [ | Cross-sectional study: 232 USA euthyroid patients with T2D | FT4 | MRS; liver biopsy was performed in patients with a diagnosis of NAFLD; 63% with NAFLD | Age, BMI, hemoglobin A1c | FT4 levels were significantly associated with hepatic triglyceride. However, no associations between thyroid function tests and liver histological parameters (such as inflammation, hepatocyte ballooning, and advanced fibrosis) were observed |
| [ | A population-based, prospective cohort study (the Rotterdam study): 9419 Dutch euthyroid individuals | Subclinical hypothyroidism was defined as serum TSH levels >4.0 mIU/L and normal FT4; overt hypothyroidism was defined as serum TSH >4.0 mIU/L and FT4 levels <0.8 ng/dL | Fatty liver index at baseline; USG and Fibroscan® at follow-up; 13% of participants developed incident NAFLD over a median follow-up of 10 years | Age, sex, BMI, alcohol intake, smoking status, follow-up time, use of lipid-lowering agents, lipids, hypertension, diabetes | Compared to euthyroidism, any form of hypothyroidism was associated with an increased risk of NAFLD. Moreover, subclinical and overt hypothyroidism were associated with an increased risk of liver fibrosis as detected by Fibroscan® |
| [ | Cross-sectional study: 115 Turkish individuals | FT3/FT4 ratio | USG; 60% with NAFLD | Waist circumference, | FT3/FT4 ratio was independently associated with an increased risk of NAFLD |
| [ | Population-based study (Lifelines Cohort Study): 20,289 Dutch euthyroid individuals | TSH, FT4, FT3 | FLI (≥60); 21% with NAFLD | Age, sex | FLI ≥60 was independently associated with higher FT3 and lower FT4 levels |
| [ | Cross-sectional study: 580 Filipino adults | TSH >4.5 mIU/L without previous history of thyroid disease | USG; 48% with NAFLD | None | NAFLD was not independently associated with TSH levels |
| [ | Case-control study 100 Indian adult non-obese hypothyroid patients and 100 age-, sex-, and BMI-matched euthyroid controls | Subclinical hypothyroidism was defined as serum TSH levels ≥4.1 mIU/L and normal FT4 levels, whereas overt hypothyroidism was defined as serum TSH levels ≥4.1 mIU/L and FT4 levels <0.7 ng/dL | USG; 42% with NAFLD | None | NAFLD was diagnosed in 30 patients with hypothyroid and in 12 controls |
| [ | Cross-sectional study: 425 South Koreans with biopsy-proven NAFLD | Subclinical hypothyroidism was defined as serum TSH >4.5 mIU/L and normal FT4 | Biopsy | Age, sex, BMI, smoking status, hypertension, diabetes, lipids, visceral adipose tissue area, HOMA-IR | Subclinical hypothyroidism was independently associated with an increased risk of NASH and advanced fibrosis |
| [ | Population-based study: 3452 Koreans from Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2013 to 2015 | Subclinical hypothyroidism was defined as a serum TSH levels >6.7 mIU/L with serum FT4 within a normal range | Hepatic steatosis index (≥36) | Age, smoking status, physical activity, income, MetS, waist circumference, lipids, systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, fasting glucose, urine iodine, thyroid peroxidase antibodies | Subclinical hypothyroidism was independently associated with an increased risk of NAFLD in males, but not in females |
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| [ | 14 observational studies for a total of 42,143 individuals | Self-reported history of hypothyroidism with use of levothyroxine replacement therapy or by presence of abnormal thyroid function tests | Imaging and biopsy | Multiple demographic and clinical variables | NAFLD was not independently associated with hypothyroidism |
| [ | 13 observational studies for a total of 37,194 individuals | Self-reported history of hypothyroidism with use of levothyroxine replacement therapy or by presence of abnormal thyroid function tests | Liver enzymes, imaging, and biopsy | Multiple demographic and clinical variables | Hypothyroidism was independently associated with an increased risk of NAFLD |
| [ | 12 cross-sectional and 3 longitudinal studies for a total of 44,140 individuals | Self-reported history of hypothyroidism with use of levothyroxine replacement therapy or by presence of abnormal thyroid function tests | Imaging and biopsy | Multiple demographic and clinical variables | Hypothyroidism was independently associated with an increased risk of prevalent NAFLD. Meta-analysis of data from 3 longitudinal studies documented that subclinical hypothyroidism was not independently associated with an increased risk of incident over a median follow-up of 5 years |
| [ | 26 observational studies for a total of 61,548 individuals | Self-reported history of hypothyroidism with use of levothyroxine replacement therapy or by presence of abnormal thyroid function tests | Imaging, FLI, and biopsy | Multiple demographic and clinical variables | NAFLD patients had significantly higher TSH levels compared to controls. In addition, hypothyroidism was significantly associated with the risk of NAFLD |
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; FLI, fatty liver index; FT3, free triiodothyronine; FT4, free thyroxine; HOMA, homeostatic model assessment; IR, insulin resistance; NAFLD, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease; MetS, metabolic syndrome; MRS, magnetic resonance spectroscopy; NASH, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis; T2D, type 2 diabetes; TSH, thyroid-stimulating hormone; USA, United States of America, USG, ultrasonography.
Main causes of hypogonadism (modified from Mintziori et al. [87]).
| Congenital anatomical abnormalities of the gonads |
| Castration |
| Specific syndromes (e.g., Turner’s syndrome; Alstrom’s syndrome; Kallmann syndrome) |
| Drugs (e.g., antiandrogens, antiestrogens, chemotherapy) |
| Radiation |
| Hemochromatosis |
| Autoimmune |
| Congenital |
| Tumor |
| Trauma |
| Radiation |
| Functional |
Epidemiological evidence supporting the notion that patients with hypogonadism are at higher risk of NAFLD.
| Ref. | Study Characteristics | Diagnosis of NAFLD | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
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| [ | A cohort of 117 hypogonadic men (34–69 years), who were treated with HRT (testosterone undecanoate for 1 year) | ALT, AST, and CRP | HRT was associated with a significant reduction in adiposity measures, lipid profile, and rate of individuals who met the criteria of the MetS. Steatosis was strongly associated with all components of the MetS and RLE, which were associated with higher plasma CRP concentrations, significantly decreased following 1-year HRT |
| [ | 1944 non-drinking men submitted to repeated liver ultrasonography over a median 4.2-year period, with available baseline serum TT level were evaluated | Ultrasonography | Baseline levels of TT were significantly lower in NAFLD individuals in cross-sectional analyses. However, TT level was not independently associated with either development or regression of NAFLD during follow-up |
| [ | Retrospective study comparing 75 Chinese IHH men (mean age 21.4 ± 3.8 years, range 17–30 years) to 135 age- and sex-matched healthy controls | Ultrasonography | Compared to healthy controls, IHH men had higher serum ACTH levels, lower cortisol levels, deranged glycolipidic profile and a higher prevalence of NAFLD. NAFLD was independently associated with ACTH levels |
| [ | 55 consecutive men with chronic SCI admitted to a rehabilitation program were submitted to clinical/biochemical evaluations and liver ultrasonography | Ultrasonography | NAFLD was diagnosed in 49% of cases. TT and FT levels were independently associated with NAFLD; the risk of NAFLD increased by 1% for each decrement of 1 ng/dL of TT and of 3% for each decrement of 1 pg/mL of FT |
| [ | Out of 380,669 men with histologically proven prostate cancer, 31,117 elderly men who received ADT were identified by using a representative cancer registry. Individuals with metastatic disease, pre-existent MetS, diabetes, preexisting liver disease, or a history of alcoholism/ alcohol related disorders were excluded | Diagnostic and procedural codes | Elderly men submitted to ADT were more likely to be diagnosed with NAFLD, cirrhosis, liver necrosis, and any liver disease |
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| [ | Retrospective analysis of serum liver enzymes in 80 women with TS, followed by a prospective study in 20 women with TS following 3 months on-and-off HRT | GGT, AST, and ALP | 44% of women with TS had RLE. HRT resulted in a significant reduction in serum liver enzymes without improving serum protein concentrations |
| [ | Prospective, double-blind, RCT vs. placebo recruiting 5408 women who underwent hysterectomies and enrolled into the multicentric Italian tamoxifen chemoprevention trial | NAFLD was suspected based on de novo incident chronic unexplained hyper-transaminasemia (× 1.5 n.v.) over a 6-month period, in the absence of competing etiologies and confirmed with ultrasonography. NAFLD women defined as above were offered confirmative liver biopsy | 52 out of 64 women who met the predefined criteria in the course of follow-up developed suspected US-confirmed NAFLD: 34 on tamoxifen vs. 18 on placebo, HR = 2.0 (95% CI 1.1–3.5; |
| [ | 50 women with T2D entered a double-blind, RCT of HRT vs. placebo | AST, ALT, GGT, and ALP | Compared to those randomized to placebo, women randomized and compliant to HRT ( |
| [ | Serum liver enzymes were assessed in 169 women (14 with TS and 11 controls with hypogonadism) on HRT with oral E2 | GGT, ALT, ALP, albumin, and bilirubin | The prevalence and incidence rates of RLE among women with TS were 91% and 2.1% per year, respectively. RLE were associated with total cholesterol and BMI, and reversed by increasing doses of HRT |
| [ | 218 women with TS (mean age 33 ± 13, range 16–71 years) from outpatient clinics at Swedish university hospitals. | AST, ALT, ALP, GGT, serology for viral hepatitis and liver-specific auto-antibodies | 36% of TS women had one or more RLE; the most prevalent was serum GGT level, which was independently associated with total cholesterol both at baseline and at 5 years. Liver histology findings in 6 TS women submitted to LB included cholangitis ( |
| [ | This Mexican cross-sectional study compared anthropometric, metabolic, hormonal (serum estradiol and cortisol concentrations), and biochemical variables in 93 women with NAFLD and as many NAFLD-free controls | Ultrasonography and transient elastography; APRI, NFS | The prevalence of NAFLD in premenopausal, post-menopausal, and PCOS patients was 32.2, 57.9, and 62%, respectively. Age, adiposity measures, fasting glucose, HOMA-IR, and insulin were significantly higher in NAFLD patients. Compared to NAFLD women, those NAFLD-free women had significantly higher levels of serum E2 |
| [ | 541 individuals with biopsy-proven NASH were recruited. LRA was used to determine the association among sex, menopause, and severity of hepatic fibrosis | Liver biopsy | Compared to pre-menopausal women, men and post-menopausal women had a higher risk of advanced liver fibrosis suggesting that estrogens may protect from fibrosis |
| [ | Survey of questionnaires referring to 492 patients with TS (age 17.1–42.5 years) administered by attending physicians throughout Japan. For comparison purposes, data from the National Health and Nutrition Survey were used | Liver dysfunction was defined as AST ≥41 U/L, ALT ≥36 U/L, or GGT ≥60 U/L | Women with TS tend to become obese from young ages (15–39 years). Compared to the Japanese general female population, women with TS had higher prevalence rates of diabetes, hypertension, dyslipidemia, and liver dysfunction which were associated with increasing BMI rather than karyotypes |
| [ | Retrospective analysis of incident fatty liver and/or RLE during SERM treatment in 1061 women who were treated for breast cancer | Imaging and/or ALT | SERM treatment was independently associated with an increased the risk of incident raised serum ALT levels and/or fatty liver. Consistently, SERM discontinuation was associated with normalization of raised ALT levels in virtually all cases. No cases of liver-related death/ progression to cirrhosis were registered |
| [ | Analysis of data from 488 post-menopausal women with histologically proven NAFLD and self-reported information on age at menopause | Liver histology | In post-menopausal women with NAFLD, the duration of estrogen deficiency affected risk of liver fibrosis. |
Abbreviations: ADT, androgen deprivation therapy; ALP, alkaline phosphatase; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; APRI, AST-to-platelet ratio index; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; BMI, body mass index; CI, confidence intervals; CRP, C-reactive protein; E2, 17-β-estradiol; FL, fatty liver; FT, free testosterone; GGT, γ-glutamyl transferase; HR, hazards ratio; HRT, hormone replacement therapy; HWR, hip-to-waist ratio; IHH, idiopathic hypogonadotropic hypogonadism; LB, liver biopsy; LRA, logistic regression analysis; MetS, metabolic syndrome; NAFLD, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease; NFS, NAFLD fibrosis score; RCT, randomized controlled trial; RLE, raised liver enzymes; SCI, spinal cord injury; SERM, selective estrogen receptor modulator; TS, Turner syndrome; TT, total testosterone; US, ultrasound.
Metabolic effects of sex hormones (modified from Shen et al. [108]).
| Glucose Metabolism | Lipid Metabolism | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| ↑ Insulin clearance | ↑ Glycogen storage | ↑ Lipolysis | ↑ Cholesterol removal |
| ↓Gluconeogenesis | ↓Lipogenesis | ↓Cholesterol synthesis | ||
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| ↑ Insulin receptor | ↑ Glycogen synthesis | ↑ Cholesterol | ↑ Cholesterol synthesis |
| ↓Glucose uptake | ↓Lipogenesis | ↓Cholesterol removal | ||
Evidence for an association of low serum levels of sulfated dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA-S) with histologically proven fibrosing NASH.
| Ref. | Method | Findings | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Overall, 439 patients with biopsy-proven mild/advanced NAFLD were enrolled in the USA | Compared to patients with mild disease, individuals with advanced NAFLD exhibited lower serum concentrations of DHEA-S | NASH with advanced stages of fibrosis is strongly associated with low serum concentrations of DHEA-S |
| [ | Data from 133 Japanese patients with biopsy-proven NAFLD (90 with NASH: 73 patients had fibrosis stage 0–2, and 17 had advanced disease as defined by fibrosis stage 3 or 4) were compared to 399 sex- and age-matched healthy controls | DHEA-S serum concentrations were not statistically different from those found in the controls | Low circulating DHEA-S could have a causal role in the progression of NAFLD to fibrosing NASH |
| [ | 69 Japanese men who had NAFLD diagnosed with ultrasonography were extracted from a larger sample of 158 Japanese men who had neither viral liver diseases nor an alcoholic intake >20 g/day | At multivariate regression analysis, serum ALT was positively correlated with serum DHEA-S, serum triglyceride, and BMI | DHEAS levels are increased in patients with NAFLD with elevated ALT levels |
| [ | 160 individuals with morbid obesity were submitted to liver biopsy which showed SS in 72, NASH with fibrosis stage 0–1 in 60, and NASH with fibrosis stage ≥2 in 12 patients. 16 had normal liver histology | With one exception, all patients with NASH and fibrosis stage 2–3 had low serum DHEA concentrations, i.e., <123 μg/dL. | Low serum levels of DHEA are very common among morbidly obese individuals with NASH and advanced fibrosis |
| [ | This study enrolled (a) a training cohort of 44 patients with biopsy proven NAFLD and (b) a validation cohort comprising 105 patients with biopsy-proven NAFLD and 26 with biopsy-proven PBC patients. Moreover, 48 age-matched healthy controls who had normal liver tests and no infection with hepatitis viruses were evaluated | In the training cohort, increasing severity of hepatic fibrosis was associated with a decrease of DHEA-S and etiocholanolone-S and an increase of 16-OH-DHEA-S. | Disturbances in the hormonal profile are a specific feature of NAFLD, which could be exploited for therapeutic purposes |
| [ | Retrospective case-control study enrolling 75 Chinese men with IHH and 135 age- and sex-matched healthy controls. | DHEA-S serum concentrations were significantly more elevated among those 22 patients with IHH and NAFLD than among those 41 with IHH without NAFLD | There is a complex interaction among |
Abbreviation: CEI, chemiluminescent enzyme immunoassay; DHEA-S, sulfated dehydroepiandrosterone; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; Etiocholanolone-S, 5α-androstan-3β ol-17-one sulfate; HPA, hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal; IHH, idiopathic hypogonadotropic hypogonadism; IR, insulin resistance; LMW, low molecular weight; NASH, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis; 16-OH-DHEA-S, hydroxy-dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate; PBC, primary biliary cholangitis; RIA, radioimmunoassay; SS, simple steatosis.
Principal published studies evaluating the association of growth hormone deficiency (GHD) with NAFLD.
| Author, Ref. | Method, Cohort, and Diagnostic Criteria | Findings |
|---|---|---|
| [ | Longitudinal cohort study. | NAFLD was found in 21 patients with metabolic syndrome-like phenotype (prevalence of 2.3%). |
| [ | Cross-sectional retrospective study. | NAFLD prevalence was significantly higher of 6.4-fold in GHD group compared to healthy controls, independently of obesity. Overweight and insulin resistance were more prevalent in GHD group with NAFLD. Histological NASH was found in 14 out of 16. |
| [ | Cross-sectional study. | Prevalence of hepatic steatosis higher in GHD subjects compared to hypopituitaric subjects without GHD, independently of BMI and triglycerides levels |
| [ | Cross-sectional observational study. | Prevalence of fatty liver was significantly higher in men with hypopituitarism than controls. Among NAFLD patients with hypopituitarism, GH levels were lower and negatively correlated with degree of steatosis |
| [ | Cross-sectional study. | Although GHD patients exhibited higher visceral fat, the 2 groups presented similar liver enzyme levels and IHLC. GHRT was associated with reduction of subcutaneous and visceral adipose tissue and, in those with baseline high liver fat, with a positive trend in reduction of IHLC |
| [ | Cross-sectional study. | No significant difference in IHLC and prevalence of hepatic steatosis was observed in the two groups. |
Abbreviations: NAFLD, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease; NASH, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis; GH, growth hormone; GHD, growth hormone deficiency; BMI, body mass index; GHRT, growth hormone replacement therapy; IHCL, intrahepatic lipid content.