Reuters Health Information: Fatty liver disease increases kids' risk of diabetes
Fatty liver disease increases kids' risk of diabetes
Last Updated: 2016-08-01
By Kathryn Doyle
(Reuters Health) - About seven million children in the U.S.
have nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), and nearly a
third of those kids also have prediabetes or diabetes, according
to a new study.
NAFLD "is one of the biggest risk factors for the
development of type 2 diabetes in children," said Dr. Jeffrey B.
Schwimmer, director of the Fatty Liver Clinic at Rady Children's
Hospital in San Diego.
"The prevalence of type 2 diabetes is approximately 1 in
2,500 in the general population, 1 in 200 in children with
obesity, and 1 in 15 in children with NAFLD," Schwimmer said.
NAFLD can cause scarring in the liver and can lead to liver
failure and the need for a transplant. It may be related to
genetics, obesity and some medications. It can be treated but
not cured.
In adults, NAFLD often coincides with abnormal sugar
metabolism. People with NAFLD who have type 2 diabetes have a
higher risk for a more severe form of liver disease,
nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), which carries the highest
risk for cirrhosis, end stage liver disease, and liver cancer.
The researchers studied 675 kids under age 18 with NAFLD.
The average body mass index (BMI) was 32, above the clinical
cutoff for obesity of 30.
Twenty-three percent of the kids with NAFLD had prediabetes
and almost seven percent had type 2 diabetes.
Girls with NAFLD were five times as likely as boys to have
type 2 diabetes.
More than 40 percent of kids with type 2 diabetes also had
NASH, compared to 34 percent of kids with prediabetes and 22
percent of those with normal blood sugar, the researchers
reported in JAMA Pediatrics, August 1.
When the liver gets fatty, some of its metabolic pathways
are progressively impaired, including insulin sensitivity, said
Dr. Valerio Nobili, head of the Liver Research Unit at Bambino
Gesu Childrens Hospital in Rome, Italy, who was not part of the
new study.
Currently, treatment for NAFLD involves optimizing lifestyle
including nutrition, physical activity, and mental well-being,
he said. Based on this study, kids with NAFLD should also have
blood sugar tests and be monitored for progression of liver
disease, diabetes and the consequences of both, he said.
"Although children with NAFLD overall are typically boys,
girls with NAFLD are more likely to have diabetes," Schwimmer
said. "Special attention should be given to children with the
combination of type 2 diabetes and NASH, as they are at
particularly high risk for premature morbidity and mortality."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2aqQ0fG
JAMA Pediatr 2016.
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