| Literature DB >> 33195326 |
Stephania C Isaza1, Elvira Del Pozo-Maroto1, Lucía Domínguez-Alcón1, Liliam Elbouayadi1, Águeda González-Rodríguez1, Carmelo García-Monzón1.
Abstract
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is currently the most common chronic liver disease worldwide and comprises varied grades of intrahepatic lipid accumulation, inflammation, ballooning, and fibrosis; the most severe cases result in cirrhosis and liver failure. There is extensive clinical and experimental evidence indicating that chronic intermittent hypoxia, featuring a respiratory disorder of growing prevalence worldwide termed obstructive sleep apnea, could contribute to the progression of NAFLD from simple steatosis, also termed non-alcoholic fatty liver or hepatosteatosis, to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis; however, the molecular mechanisms by which hypoxia might contribute to hepatosteatosis setup and progression still remain to be fully elucidated. In this review, we have prepared an overview about the link between hypoxia and lipid accumulation within the liver, focusing on the impact of hypoxia on the molecular mechanisms underlying hepatosteatosis onset.Entities:
Keywords: NAFLD; hepatosteatosis; hypoxia; hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs); obstructive sleep apnea
Year: 2020 PMID: 33195326 PMCID: PMC7645232 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2020.578001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Principal clinical studies examining the impact of OSA on NAFLD.
| Minville et al. ( | 226 adult OSA patients/0 controls | Cross-sectional study | NAFL and NASH by non-invasive tools and OSA by polysomnography | Tc90% was significantly associated with NAFL, but not with NASH. |
| Sundaram et al. ( | 25 adolescent NAFLD patients (15 with OSA/10 without OSA) | Cross-sectional study | NAFLD by liver histology and OSA by polysomnography | OSA was significantly associated with NAFL, NAS score, and fibrosis stage. |
| Cakmak et al. ( | 118 adult OSA patients/19 without OSA | Cross-sectional study | NAFLD by ultrasonography and OSA by polysomnography | AHI and ODI were significantly higher in NAFLD than in controls. |
| Benotti et al. ( | 269 obese adults with OSA/93 obese adults without OSA | Cross-sectional study | NAFLD by liver histology and OSA by polysomnography | OSA severity was associated with NAFLD only in patients without metabolic syndrome. |
| Jullian-Desayes et al. ( | 103 adult OSA patients treated with effective CPAP vs. sham CPAP | Randomized controlled clinical trial | NAFLD by non-invasive tools and OSA by lung function parameters | NAFLD did not improve after 6–12 weeks of effective CPAP treatment. |
| Trzepizur et al. ( | 1,170 adult OSA patients/115 adults without OSA | Cross-sectional study | NAFLD by non-invasive tools and OSA by respiratory recordings | OSA severity correlated with hepatosteatosis, but not with fibrosis. |
| Asfari et al. ( | 1,490,150 hospitalized OSA patients/29,222,374 non-OSA hospitalized patients | USA database study | OSA and NASH diagnosis by ICD-9 code in clinical records | NASH diagnosis was 3-fold more frequent among OSA patients than in non-OSA patients. |
| Jin et al. ( | 2,272 adult OSA patients (2007–2017) | Meta-analysis and systematic review | NAFLD by liver histology and OSA by polysomnography | OSA positively correlated with hepatosteatosis, ballooning, and fibrosis. |
| Kim et al. ( | 351 adult OSA patients on CPAP therapy | Institutional prospective database study | NAFLD by transaminases and APRI index and OSA by polysomnography | OSA patients with good adherence to 3 months CPAP therapy improved transaminases and APRI index (liver fibrosis). |
| Sundaram et al. ( | Nine adolescent OSA patients on CPAP therapy/23 adolescent untreated OSA patients | Observational longitudinal study | NAFLD by transaminases and OSA by polysomnography | Effective 3 months CPAP therapy improved ALT. |
| Schwenger et al. ( | 49 obese adults with NAFLD/12 obese adults with normal liver | Cross-sectional study | NAFLD by liver histology and OSA by polysomnography | AHI positively correlated with liver inflammation. |
OSA, obstructive sleep apnea; NAFLD, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease; NAFL, non-alcoholic fatty liver or hepatosteatosis; NASH, non-alcoholic steatohepatitis; NAS, NAFLD activity score; AHI, apnea/hypopnea index; ODI, oxygen desaturation index; Tc90%, percentage of sleep time with oxygen saturation <90%; CPAP, continuous positive airway pressure; APRI, aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio index.
Figure 1Pathophysiological role of hypoxia in hepatosteatosis onset. Hypoxia inactivates prolyl hydroxylase domains (PHDs), enhancing hepatic HIF1α and HIF2α expressions, which could contribute to hepatosteatosis onset by the upregulation of free fatty acid (FFA) uptake, the repression of FFA β-oxidation, and the stimulation of de novo lipogenesis.