Fatty liver ups risk of cardiovascular disease
Increasing accumulation of fat, inflammation and fibrosis of the liver appear tied to corresponding increases in the risk of cardiovascular disease, especially in patients with diabetes, according to the findings of a small retrospective study.
“What we are realizing is that [nonalcoholic fatty liver disease] is adding extra cardiovascular risk to people with diabetes, and to those without, on top of that which is already existing,†one of the lead study investigators said.
A professor of endocrinology and metabolism at the University of Southampon (England), suggested that patients with documented liver disease perhaps require more aggressive therapies.
In the studies of 112 patients with biopsy-proven nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), Kleiner scores — a histologic measure of NAFLD severity — were shown to be highly correlated with both Framingham Risk Score (FRS) and QRISK2, two cardiovascular risk calculators.
“Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease represents a spectrum of fat-mediated liver conditions causing progressive hepatocellular damage,†as mentioned at the University of Southampon.
“There is increasing evidence of an increased cardiovascular risk associated with progression of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease.â€
The aim of the study was to see if a histopathologic marker — Kleiner score — correlated with cardiovascular risk, and if scores higher in people already known to have a high cardiovascular risk, namely those with diabetes.
Kleiner scores assess the degree of steatosis, lobular inflammation, hepatocyte “ballooning,†and fibrosis, with higher scores indicating more severe liver disease.
The mean age of the study cohort was 48 years and the mean Kleiner score was 5.3. The median FRS was 13 and the median QRISK2 core was 8. The mean body mass index of participants was proximately 34 kg/m2.
Kleiner scores were not only found to be highly correlated with both cardiovascular risk models used, but they were also higher in a subgroup of 32 patients with diabetes when compared with those without diabetes.
The increased risk of cardiovascular disease in correlation with increasing NAFLD severity was found to be independent of both hyperglycemia and increasing boy weight.
“We need more prospective studies to see what markers may be used to help stratify who requires biopsy and how best to manage people who have got NAFLD.†Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis was associated with the highest cardiovascular risk estimates in the study.
“Up until now very poor in providing cardiovascular risk reduction treatments for patients with NAFLD.†Currently the only treatment strategy proven to work for NAFLD is lifestyle changes.
“We know that losing weight and increasing activity levels are very effective at decreasing liver fat. But what we don’t know is whether those lifestyle changes are good at decreasing liver inflammation, or decreasing liver fibrosis.â€
Treatment to decrease liver fat and prevent progression to fibrosis is needed, and a part of a team now looking at the use of a high concentration of highly purified omega-3 fatty acid ethyl esters in the treatment of NAFLD.
The highly purified fish oil being used in the trial has been available commercially in Europe for at least a decade and in the United States since 2004, and is currently licensed to treat hypertriglyceridemia.
The study was not due to be completed until December 2012. Until then, clinicians needed to optimize the treatment they have at their disposal, including antihypertensive and lipid-lowering medicines commonly used to lower cardiovascular risk in conjunction with lifestyle modifications.
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