Increased risk of MAFLD and liver fibrosis in inflammatory bowel disease independent of classic metabolic risk factors
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Rodríguez-Duque, Juan Carlos; Calleja, José Luis; Iruzubieta Coz, Paula; Hernández-Conde, Marta; Rivas-Rivas, Coral; Vera, María Isabel; García, María José; Pascual, Marta; Castro, Beatriz; García Blanco, Agustín; García-Nieto, Enrique; Curiel Del Olmo, Soraya; Cagigal Cobo, María Luisa; López-Montejo, Lorena; Fernández-Lamas, Tatiana; Rasines, Laura; Fortea Ormaechea, José Ignacio; Vaqué Díez, José Pedro
Date
2023Derechos
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
© 2023 by the AGA Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license
Publicado en
Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology, 2023,
21(2), 406-414.e7
Publisher
Elsevier
Enlace a la publicación
Palabras clave
MAFLD
Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Liver Fibrosis
Metabolic Syndrome
Abstract:
ackground & Aims
There is conflicting evidence regarding the prevalence of and risk factors for metabolic-associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD) in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). We aimed to determine MAFLD prevalence and risk factors in IBD patients.
Methods
Cross-sectional, case-control study included all consecutive IBD patients treated at 2 different university hospitals. Controls were subjects randomly selected from the general population and matched by age, sex, type 2 diabetes status, and body mass index in a 1:2 ratio. MAFLD was confirmed by controlled attenuation parameter. Liver biopsies were collected when MAFLD with significant liver fibrosis was suspected. In addition, age- and fibrosis stage-paired non-IBD patients with biopsy-proven MAFLD served as a secondary control group.
Results
Eight hundred thirty-one IBD patients and 1718 controls were included. The prevalence of MAFLD and advanced liver fibrosis (transient elastography ≥9.7 kPa) was 42.00% and 9.50%, respectively, in IBD patients and 32.77% and 2.31%, respectively, in the general population (P < .001). A diagnosis of IBD was an independent predictor of MAFLD (adjusted odds ratio, 1.99; P < .001) and an independent risk factor for advanced liver fibrosis (adjusted odds ratio, 5.55; P < .001). Liver biopsies were obtained from 40 IBD patients; MAFLD was confirmed in all cases, and fibrosis of any degree was confirmed in 25 of 40 cases (62.5%). Body mass index and type 2 diabetes prevalence were significantly lower in IBD-MAFLD patients than in severity-paired patients with biopsy-proven MAFLD.
Conclusions
MAFLD and liver fibrosis are particularly prevalent in IBD patients, regardless of the influence of classic metabolic risk factors.
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