| Kim et al., 2016 [21] | Compare thecomponents and prevalence of MetS according to degree of adiposity and presence of NAFLD | n = 1695 with a history of livercirrhosis (70.5% female)Age 49–57KoreaCross-sectional study | Collect and compareanthropometric, clinical, and laboratory data of non-obese males/females without NAFLD; non-obesemales/females with NAFLD; obese males/females without NAFLD; and obesemales/females with NAFLD | − ↑ Fasting glucose in non-obese participants with NAFLD vs. obese participants without NAFLD− ↑ 3.63 times prevalence of MetS with presence of NAFLD vs. ↑ 3.84 times prevalence of MetS with obesity without NAFLD (in males)− ↑ 5.56 times prevalence of MetS with presence of NAFLD vs. ↑ 3.46 times prevalence of MetS with obesity without NAFLD (in females) |
| Chen et al., 2019 [23] | Investigatethe relationshipbetween NAFLD risk and nutconsumption | n = 1068 (534 with NAFLD and 534 without) (31.8% female)Age 18–70ChinaRetrospective case–control study | Collect dietary intake tocalculate nut consumption. Categorize nut consumption in quartiles on the distribution of daily nut intake ofcontrols | − No association between nut consumption and NAFLD risk in overall sample− Significant inverse association between ↑ nut consumption and NAFLD in the highest quartile of men’s sample |
| Georgoulis et al., 2015 [27] | Assess the presence of MetS and itsassociation withdietary habits in subjects with NAFLD | n = 73 with NAFLD (31.5%female)Age 34–56AthensCross-sectional study | NAFLD diagnosed by high liver enzyme levels andultrasound.Subjects’ food consumption assessed by food frequency questionnaire.Adherence to Mediterranean diet assessed by MedDiet Score | − 46.5% sample with MetS, ↑ waist circumference, and ↓ HDL− Positive association between MetS and consumption of red meat and refined grains− Negative association between MetS and MedDietScore and consumption of whole grains |
| Aller et al., 2018 [28] | Compare dietary, genetic, and biochemicalparameters among obese and overweight participants with NAFLD | n = 203 withbiopsy-proven NAFLD (43.3%female)Age 44–49SpainCross-sectional study | Evaluate adherence toMediterranean diet using MEDAS questionnaire,anthropometrical andbiochemical parameters, and the variants rs180069 oftumor necrosis factor gene and I148M of PNPLA3 gene | − ↑ Serum adiponectin levels and ↓ resistin and leptin concentration in overweight participants vs. obese participants− ↑ Frequency of NASH in obese participants− Adherence to Mediterranean diet as an independent protective factor for liver fibrosis and NASH in overweight participants |
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Mediterranean Diet, Physical Activity and NAFLD
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| Konerman et al., 2018 [22] | Analyze theprevalence of NAFLD between subjects in theUniversity ofMichigan Metabolic Fitness (MetFit) Program andassess its impact on liver-related and metabolicparameters, and weight amongsubjects without and with NAFLD | n = 403 whocompleted the MetFit program at theUniversity of Michigan between 2008 and 2016(37.5% female)Age 45–63MichiganCohort study | Collect laboratory andclinical data at enrolment and at 12 and 24 weeks of subjects with and without NAFLD (defined based on imaging, liver biopsy, orclinical diagnosis) who have to follow a Mediterranean diet and exercise sessions | Principal group were men with severe obesity and NAFLD− 30% ↓ weight ≥ 5%− 62% resolution of hypertriglyceridemia− 33% resolution of low HDL− 27% resolution of impaired fasting glucose− 43% normalization of alanine aminotransferase |
| Sorrentino et al., 2015 [24] | Observe if, inparticipants with less advanced stages of NAFLD, a moderateregimen of diet,exercise, and a mix of vitamin E and a new formulation of silymarin couldoffer clinicalimprovements | n = 78 with MetS and ultrasound confirmation of liver steatosis (46.2% female)Age 55–57ItalyControlled clinical study | 90-days follow-upGroup A:Standard Mediterranean diet, exercise, and a dietary adjunct (2 tablets/day of a nutraceutical productcontaining, in each tablet, 210 mg of Eurosil 85®)Group B:Standard Mediterranean diet and exercise. | Group A:↓ BMI, abdominal circumference, ultrasound measurement of right liver lobe, HSI, and lipid accumulation productGroup B:No change |
| Bullón-Vela et al., 2019 [25] | Examinethe connection among NAFLD and lifestyle factors in participants with MetS | n = 328 with MetS who participate in PREDIMED-Plus study (45.1%female)Age 55–75 (men) and 60–75 (women)SpainCross-sectional study | Collect dietary, clinical, and sociodemographic data. Evaluate physical activity and adherence toMediterranean diet using validated questionnaires and NAFLD with non-invasive HSI | − ↓ HSI values with ↑ physical activity terciles− Adherence to Mediterranean diet inversely associated with HSI values− ↑ Terciles of legume consumption inversely associated with the highest tercile of HSI |
| Abbate et al., 2021 [26] | Examine theefficacy of lifestyle intervention on the reduction of MetS and NAFLD, and if these reductions could influencerenal outcomes | n = 155 with MetS and NAFLD (39.1% female)Age 40–60SpainRandomizedcontrolled trial | 6-months follow-upGroup A (CD):Conventional diet based on American Association for the Study of Liver Diseaserecommendations with 10,000 steps a dayGroup B (MD-HMF): Mediterranean diet: high meal frequency (7 meals a day) with 10,000 steps a dayConventionalGroup C (MD-PA):Mediterranean diet: physical activity with instructedsessions 3 times a week | − No significant differences between 3 groups− ↓ Urinary albumin-to-creatine ratio in participants with ↑ levels at baseline, but without changes in liver fat− ↓ Estimated glomerular filtration in participants with hyperfiltration at baseline, associated with ↓ liver fat and insulin resistance and ↑ energy expenditure− Energy expenditure, ↓ hepatic fat accumulation, and insulin resistance = ↓ glomerular hyperfiltration− ↓ Increased albuminuria, without association with reduced liver fat |
| Gelli et al., 2017 [29] | Define the clinical effectiveness ofnutritionalrecommendation on weight loss and the reduction of liver enzymes,anthropometric and metabolicindexes, and NAFLD | n = 46 with NAFLD (37%female)Age 26–71ItalyObservational study | Examine a Mediterranean diet and clinical intervention with physical activity over 6 months, monitoring and collecting metabolicparameters, liver enzymes, severity NAFLD (by ultrasound), cardiovascular risk indexes, and biochemistry at the middle of interventions and at the end | − ↓ 93% to 48% of percentage of participants with steatosis grade ≥ 2− Regression of steatosis in 9 participants− 25 of 46 participants achieved a reduction of 7% of their weight or maintained a normal weight− ↓ Liver enzymes (especially alanine aminotransferase enzyme)− Improvement of waist circumference, BMI, waist-to-hip ratio, LDL/HDL, total cholesterol/HDL, triglycerides/HDL, serum glucose, HDL, fatty liver index, HOMA, Kotronen index, NAFLD liver fat score, visceral adipose index, and lipid accumulation product |
| Copaci et al., 2015 [30] | Examine if lifestyle intervention and exercise during a 12-month period couldreduce weight and improve steatosis | n = 86 overweight with steatosis (40.7% female)Age 35–59RomaniaProspectiveobservational study | 12-months follow-upCaloric goal based onstarting weight, daily fat goal, and physical activity (moderate intensity) | − ↓ Weight, BMI, waist circumference− ↓ Gamma glutamyl transferase, alanine aminotransferase, cholesterol, LDL, HOMA-R− Steatotest improved− Modification of leptin and adiponectin as factors related to improved steatosis (BMI and alanine aminotransferase also) |
| Takahashi et al., 2015 [31] | Examine the effects of resistance exercise on metabolic parameters of NAFLD | n = 53 with NAFLD (64.2% female)Age 37–68JapanRandomizedcontrolled study | 12-months follow-upGroup A:12 weeks of resistanceexercise and regimenGroup B:Lifestyle counseling (dietary restrictions and regular physical activities) | Group A:↑ Muscle mass and fat-free mass↓ Mean insulin and ferritin levels, hepatic steatosis grade, HOMA-IR indexGroup B:↓ LDL |
| Lee et al., 2018 [32] | Examine theassociation between NAFLDindex and HGS in older adults | n = 538 with NAFLD (80.3%female)Age > 60KoreaCross-sectional study | High HGS / Mid HGS / Low HGS groups (based onrelative HGS)High risk / Low risk groups (based on FIB-4, SNS, HSI, and NFS)Assess body-compositionparameters, HGS, and NAFLD | − ↓ Linear in NAFLD index (SNS, HSI, NFS, FIB-4) across ↑ HGS levels− Low HGS group: ↑ ORs of SNS, HSI, and NFS (compared to High HGS group) |
| Cho et al., 2021 [33] | Investigate the effect of HGS and SES on the risk of NAFLD in middle-aged adults | n = 5272 whoparticipated in KNHANES (68.2% female)Age 53–61KoreaCross-sectional study | NAFLD defined by HSI and comprehensive NAFLD score.SES based on self-reported questionnaire.Assessment ofanthropometric data, blood markers, health-relatedfactors, and HGS | ↑ Risk of NAFLD in subjects with ↓ SES and HGS vs. subjects with ↑ SES and HGS |