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Epidemiological modifiers of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease: focus on high-risk groups

Epidemiological modifiers of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease: focus on high-risk groups
Epidemiological modifiers of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease: focus on high-risk groups
An improved understanding of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease epidemiology would lead to identification of individuals at high risk of developing chronic liver disease and extra-hepatic complications, thus contributing to more effective case finding of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease among selected groups.

We aimed to illustrate the epidemiology of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease in high-risk groups, which were identified based on existing literature. To this end, PubMed was searched to retrieve original articles published until May 2015 using relevant and pertinent keywords “nonalcoholic fatty liver disease” and “diabetes”, “obesity”, “hyperlipidemia”, “familial heterozygous hypobetalipoproteinemia”, “hypertension”, “metabolic syndrome”, “ethnicity”, “family history” or “genetic polymorphisms”.

We found that age, sex and ethnicity are major physiological modifiers of the risk of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, along with belonging to “non-alcoholic fatty liver disease families” and carrying risk alleles for selected genetic polymorphisms. Metabolic syndrome, diabetes, obesity, mixed hyperlipidaemia and hypocholesterolaemia due to familial hypobetalipoproteinaemia are the major metabolic modifiers of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease risk. Compared with these metabolic conditions, however, arterial hypertension appears to carry a relatively more modest risk of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.

A better understanding of the epidemiology of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease may result in a more liberal policy of case finding among high-risk groups
dyslipidemia, metabolic syndrome, NAFLD, obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus
1590-8658
997-1006
Lonardo, A.
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Bellentani, S.
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Argo, C.K.
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Ballestri, S.
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Byrne, Christopher D.
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Caldwell, S.H.
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Cortez-Pinto, H.
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Grieco, A.
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Machado, M.V.
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Miele, L.
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Targher, G.
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Lonardo, A.
c7080bf1-7038-4186-ae7d-cc7685580262
Bellentani, S.
78869363-b6ef-4205-9751-f49b68c919a5
Argo, C.K.
6de1699f-fa9a-4fbf-aec6-a86a5be02ca1
Ballestri, S.
6c5abaa3-1ff7-4279-bdd9-4ed64cd9c746
Byrne, Christopher D.
1370b997-cead-4229-83a7-53301ed2a43c
Caldwell, S.H.
99dc0565-d127-4549-a4cf-106704c501d2
Cortez-Pinto, H.
931673c2-4c4b-402a-8854-56a29779c1d1
Grieco, A.
4aaf915a-c499-41f0-a70d-cddc8b22df9c
Machado, M.V.
37321dc5-7807-454c-a1c1-e18fc8f9cfa9
Miele, L.
1e248848-4351-40de-8140-b06ad98a264c
Targher, G.
5a842bd2-91c4-4063-b639-da6c681f3698

Lonardo, A., Bellentani, S., Argo, C.K., Ballestri, S., Byrne, Christopher D., Caldwell, S.H., Cortez-Pinto, H., Grieco, A., Machado, M.V., Miele, L. and Targher, G. (2015) Epidemiological modifiers of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease: focus on high-risk groups. Digestive and Liver Disease, 47 (12), 997-1006. (doi:10.1016/j.dld.2015.08.004). (PMID:26454786)

Record type: Article

Abstract

An improved understanding of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease epidemiology would lead to identification of individuals at high risk of developing chronic liver disease and extra-hepatic complications, thus contributing to more effective case finding of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease among selected groups.

We aimed to illustrate the epidemiology of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease in high-risk groups, which were identified based on existing literature. To this end, PubMed was searched to retrieve original articles published until May 2015 using relevant and pertinent keywords “nonalcoholic fatty liver disease” and “diabetes”, “obesity”, “hyperlipidemia”, “familial heterozygous hypobetalipoproteinemia”, “hypertension”, “metabolic syndrome”, “ethnicity”, “family history” or “genetic polymorphisms”.

We found that age, sex and ethnicity are major physiological modifiers of the risk of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, along with belonging to “non-alcoholic fatty liver disease families” and carrying risk alleles for selected genetic polymorphisms. Metabolic syndrome, diabetes, obesity, mixed hyperlipidaemia and hypocholesterolaemia due to familial hypobetalipoproteinaemia are the major metabolic modifiers of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease risk. Compared with these metabolic conditions, however, arterial hypertension appears to carry a relatively more modest risk of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.

A better understanding of the epidemiology of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease may result in a more liberal policy of case finding among high-risk groups

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Accepted/In Press date: August 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 August 2015
Published date: December 2015
Keywords: dyslipidemia, metabolic syndrome, NAFLD, obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus
Organisations: Human Development & Health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 380779
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/380779
ISSN: 1590-8658
PURE UUID: e111b963-7c48-4dee-bb67-6e1e9a1c2b04
ORCID for Christopher D. Byrne: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6322-7753

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 14 Sep 2015 13:51
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:02

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Contributors

Author: A. Lonardo
Author: S. Bellentani
Author: C.K. Argo
Author: S. Ballestri
Author: S.H. Caldwell
Author: H. Cortez-Pinto
Author: A. Grieco
Author: M.V. Machado
Author: L. Miele
Author: G. Targher

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