| Literature DB >> 35122404 |
Karl J Lackner1, Jörn M Schattenberg2,3, Yvonne Huber2, Andreas Schulz4, Irene Schmidtmann5, Manfred Beutel6, Norbert Pfeiffer7, Thomas Münzel8,9, Peter R Galle2, Philipp S Wild4,9,10.
Abstract
The prevalence of liver disease, and especially of advanced liver fibrosis, in the German population is poorly defined. The aim of the study was to explore liver enzymes and surrogate scores of hepatic steatosis and advanced hepatic fibrosis in a population-based cohort study in Germany. In the cross-sectional population-based Gutenberg Health study, data of 14,950 participants enrolled between 2007 and 2012 were captured and analyzed. The distribution of alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT), fatty liver index (FLI), and Fibrosis-4 (FIB-4) score, as well as the underlying risk factors, were assessed by regression models. Elevated liver enzymes in this population-based sample were seen in 19.9% for ALT, 12.8% for AST, and 14% for GGT. Risk factors for liver disease included alcohol use and the presence of the metabolic syndrome, which were both risk factors associated with increased liver enzymes. The FLI suggested that 37.5% of the population exhibited hepatic steatosis and 1.1% of patients exhibited a FIB-4 above the upper cutoff, while 19.2% were in the intermediate range. Interestingly, advanced fibrosis was significantly more frequent in men compared with women (FIB-4: 1.5% vs. 0.6% [P < 0.0001]; NFS: 3.6% vs. 1.9% [P < 0.0001]). In addition, age was a relevant risk factor for exhibiting a noninvasive surrogate score suggestive of advanced fibrosis in the current study population.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35122404 PMCID: PMC9134815 DOI: 10.1002/hep4.1899
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hepatol Commun ISSN: 2471-254X
Demographic Data and Prevalence of Comorbidities
| Parameter | n (%) |
|---|---|
| Male sex | 7,564 (50.6) |
| Age# (range) (years) | 55.0 (25‐74) |
| BMI# (kg/m2) | 26.6 (23.9; 30.0) |
| Obesity | 3,767 (25.2) |
| Type 2 diabetes | 1,385 (9.3) |
| Hypertension | 7,437 (49.8) |
| Dyslipidemia | 5,160 (34.6) |
| Metabolic syndrome | 4,567 (30.5) |
| Chronic heart disease | 2,156 (14.4) |
| Chronic kidney disease | 602 (4) |
| Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | 740 (5) |
| Cancer | 1,351 (9) |
| Chronic liver disease | 110 (0.7) |
| Smoker | 2,899 (19.4) |
| High alcohol consumption | 434 (2.9) |
Data are expressed as number (percentage) or #median (25th, 75th percentiles). Obesity is defined as BMI > 30 kg/m2. Metabolic syndrome is defined according to the definitions of the Joint Scientific Statement for Harmonizing the Metabolic Syndrome.(15) High alcohol consumption was defined as >60 g/day in men and >40 g/day in women.
Logistic Regression Models Regarding Elevated Liver Function Tests
| Parameter | AST Increase | ALT Increase | GGT Increase |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex (women) | 0.820; 0.741‐0.907; | 1.230; 1.130‐1.340; | 1.407; 1.272‐1.554; |
| Age (10‐year intervals) | 1.051; 1.001‐1.103; | 0.820; 0.787‐0.855; | 1.126; 1.072‐1.183; |
| Alcohol consumption | 1.219; 1.084‐1.368; | 1.296; 1.172‐1.432; | 1.699; 1.521‐1.897; |
| High alcohol consumption | 2.400; 1.903‐3.007; | 1.774; 1.414‐2.211; | 3.168; 2.546‐3.927; |
| Current smoker | 0.689; 0.598‐0.790; | 0.734; 0.656‐0.820; | 1.147; 1.012‐1.298: |
| Metabolic syndrome | 1.526; 1.360‐1.711; | 2.044; 1.850‐2.259; | 2.284; 2.044‐2.552; |
| LDL increase | 0.989; 0.882‐1.107; | 1.411; 1.286‐1.548; | 1.334; 1.199‐1.482; |
| HDL decrease | 1.444; 1.271‐1.636; | 2.290; 2.067‐2.535; | 1.476; 1.301‐1.671; |
Data are expressed as OR; 95% CI (n = 14,742). Data are adjusted for sex, age, high alcohol consumption, current smoker, metabolic syndrome, increased LDL, and decreased HDL. Alcohol consumption was defined as an average daily intake of ≥20 g for women and ≥30 g for men; high alcohol consumption was defined as >60 g/day in men and >40 g/day in women.
FIG. 1Distribution of the study cohort in the FLI according to sex and age.
FIG. 2Distribution of the study population in the FIB‐4 index according to sex and age.
Logistic Regression Models Regarding FLI
| Parameter | FLI (High) Versus the Rest |
|---|---|
| Sex (women) | 0.309; 0.284‐0.337; |
| Age (10‐year intervals) | 1.167; 1.121‐1.215; |
| Alcohol consumption | 1.075; 0.937‐1.233; |
| High alcohol consumption | 1.358; 1.066‐1.729; |
| Current smoker | 0.915; 0.824‐1.017; |
| Metabolic syndrome | 3.855; 3.511‐4.235; |
| LDL increase | 1.238; 1.130‐1.355; |
| HDL decrease | 5.491; 4.933‐6.118; |
| HbA1C increase | 1.836; 1.507‐2.242; |
| AST increase | 0.945; 0.824‐1.084; |
| ALT increase | 2.750; 2.453‐3.084; |
| GGT increase | 3.683; 3.251‐4.177; |
| ALP increase | 1.980; 1.483‐2.652; |
Data are expressed as OR; 95% CI (n = 14,736). Data are adjusted for all listed parameters.
Alcohol consumption was defined as an average daily intake of ≥20 g for women and ≥30 g for men; high alcohol consumption was defined as >60 g/day in men and >40 g/day in women.
Abbreviation: ALP, alkaline phosphatase.
Logistic Regression Models Regarding Noninvasive Surrogate Scores of Hepatic Fibrosis
| Parameter | NFS | FIB‐4 | APRI |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex (women) | 0.641; 0.501‐0.816; | 0.394; 0.264‐0.579; | 0.886; 0.713‐1.100; |
| Age (10‐year intervals) | 4.720; 3.885‐5.793; | 3.263; 2.594‐4.168; | 1.444; 1.295‐1.611; |
| Alcohol consumption | 1.031; 0.736‐1.428; | 0.921; 0.540‐1.521; | 0.891; 0.600‐1.301; |
| High alcohol consumption | 1.047; 0.508‐1.783 | 1.284; 0.673‐2.307; | 1.913; 1.252‐2.850; |
| Current smoker | 0.769; 0.508‐1.129; | 1.071; 0.606‐1.794; | 1.043; 0.785‐1.369; |
| Metabolic syndrome | 2.108; 1.597‐2.797; | 1.064; 0.716‐1.576; | 1.072; 0.832‐1.378; |
| LDL increase | 0.312; 0.213‐0.44; | 0.350; 0.194‐0.590; | 0.588; 0.455‐0.754; |
| HDL decrease | 1.714; 1.291‐2.267; | 1.223; 0.740‐1.973; | 1.410; 1.077‐1.837; |
| HbA1C increase | 4.901; 3.706‐6.471; | 0.393; 0.184‐0.773; | 0.757; 0.502‐1.119; |
| AST increase | 2.641; 1.902‐3.651; | 17.178; 11.369‐26.185; | — |
| ALT increase | 0.512; 0.358‐0.724; | 0.574; 0.376‐0.874; | 11.324; 8.865‐14.562; |
| GGT increase | 1.592; 1.191‐2.115; | 2.466; 1.664‐3.648; | 2.975; 2.381‐3.718; |
| ALP increase | 1.267; 0.675‐2.251; | 1.491; 0.670‐3.027; | 1.482; 0.955‐2.243; |
Data are expressed as OR; 95% CI (n = 14,742). NFS and FIB‐4 are comparisons of high scores versus the rest. APRI is a comparison of high and intermediate scores versus the rest. Data are adjusted for all listed parameters. Alcohol consumption was defined as an average daily intake of ≥20 g for women and ≥30 g for men; high alcohol consumption was defined >60 g/day in men and >40 g/day in women.
Abbreviation: ALP, alkaline phosphatase.