Reuters Health Information: Fatty liver adds to cardiovascular risk in obese type 2 diabetics
Fatty liver adds to cardiovascular risk in obese type 2 diabetics
Last Updated: 2016-02-22
By Megan Brooks
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
(NAFLD) in obese patients with type 2 diabetes is associated
with an unfavorable metabolic profile, new research shows.
"Having fatty liver really adds to your cardiovascular risk
significantly in the sense that you are more insulin resistant
and your lipid profile is worse," Dr. Kenneth Cusi, chief of the
Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, the
University of Florida, Gainesville, told Reuters Health by
phone.
These patients "probably need intensified management, not
only diabetes management, but cardiovascular risk management,"
he said.
NAFLD and its more severe form with nonalcoholic
steatohepatitis (NASH) are increasing rapidly in parallel with
the increase in obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), but
the metabolic consequences are unclear, the investigators note
in Diabetes Care online February 9.
To investigate, they studied 136 obese patients with T2DM
(50 without NAFLD, 21 with isolated steatosis (no liver
inflammation) and 65 with NASH, the more severe form of fatty
liver with inflammation and fibrosis). They also studied 18
obese patients without T2DM or NAFLD and 10 nonobese healthy
controls as a reference for metabolic measurements. They
combined "state-of-the-art" metabolic measurements with
quantification of intrahepatic triglycerides and liver
histology.
They observed that, in obese T2DM patients, the development
and progression of liver disease (from without NAFLD to isolated
steatosis to NASH) are associated with more dysfunctional and
insulin-resistant adipose tissue.
"This finding highlights the important role of 'sick adipose
tissue' (also known as lipotoxicity, a damage to other tissues
like the liver from fat chronically delivered from sick adipose
tissue) in the development and progression of NAFLD. Supporting
this concept, diminished insulin action of adipose tissue
correlated strongly with the amount of intrahepatic
triglycerides, as well as with the severity of liver disease on
histology," Dr. Cusi explained in email.
They also note that in obese non-diabetic patients, the
hepatic insulin resistance index, a measure of liver insulin
resistance in the fasting state, was already roughly 30% worse
in obese control patients relative to nonobese controls without
a fatty liver. However, it was the patients with T2DM and NASH
that had the most significant impairment in hepatic insulin
sensitivity, the investigators say.
The presence of NASH in obese diabetic patients was also
associated with more severe hypertriglyceridemia but with no
differences in blood pressure or glycemia, they found.
"These results have important clinical implications, as they
suggest that identification of patients with T2DM and NASH may
highlight a subgroup of subjects in need of early and/or more
aggressive lipid-lowering therapy and cardiovascular risk factor
management," the authors write.
Dr. Cusi told Reuters Health, in a prior study (http://bit.ly/1KZSyQ5),
"We showed that half of our patients with diabetes already have
fat in the liver even at what we consider to be normal liver
enzymes."
The presence of NAFLD in type 2 diabetic patients continues
to be overlooked by clinicians, the authors note in their paper.
"Most primary care doctors and even endocrinologists are not
screening for this routinely in the clinic. Right now, there is
not an ideal way to do this," Dr. Cusi said.
He thinks physicians should have a lower threshold for
screening patients with type 2 diabetes for NAFLD/NASH. "Doctors
need to be aware that this can go under the radar," he said.
"You can order a liver ultrasound, and if that is positive, then
talk with the hepatologist and see if the patient deserves more
noninvasive procedures, like Fibroscan, or a liver biopsy, both
of which allow you to see if there is scarring in the liver or
fibrosis. And, of course anybody with elevated ALT (alanine
aminotransferase), typically in NASH roughly 50% greater than
the AST (aspartate aminotransferase), deserves special
attention."
The study had no commercial funding and the authors have no
relevant disclosures.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1SX3xNi
Diabetes Care 2016.
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