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Potential for omega-3 fatty acids to protect against the adverse effect of phytosterols: comparing laboratory outcomes in adult patients on home parenteral nutrition including different lipid emulsions

Potential for omega-3 fatty acids to protect against the adverse effect of phytosterols: comparing laboratory outcomes in adult patients on home parenteral nutrition including different lipid emulsions
Potential for omega-3 fatty acids to protect against the adverse effect of phytosterols: comparing laboratory outcomes in adult patients on home parenteral nutrition including different lipid emulsions
Background: the effect on liver function markers and inflammation of the different content of phytosterols in lipid emulsions (LEs) used in the parenteral nutrition (PN) regimen of adult home PN (HPN) patients is not clear.

Methods: plasma phytosterol and cytokine concentrations, fatty acid composition, liver function markers, and triglycerides were measured in 58 adult HPN patients receiving one of three different LEs (soybean oil-based: Intralipid; olive oil-based: ClinOleic; containing fish oil: SMOFLipid).

Results: patients receiving Intralipid had higher plasma campesterol and stigmasterol concentrations than those receiving ClinOleic or SMOFLipid. Plasma sterol concentrations were not different between patients receiving ClinOleic and SMOFLipid. Differences in plasma fatty acids reflected the fatty acid composition of the LEs. Markers of liver function did not differ among the three groups. Blood triglycerides were higher with ClinOleic than with Intralipid or SMOFLipid. Total bilirubin correlated positively with the plasma concentrations of two of the phytosterols, ALT correlated positively with one, AST with one, and GGT with three.
Conclusions: liver function markers correlate with plasma plant sterol concentrations in adult HPN patients. Adult HPN patients receiving SMOFLipid are more likely to have liver function markers and triglycerides within the normal range than those receiving ClinOleic or Intralipid. The omega-3 fatty acids in SMOFLipid may act to mitigate the adverse effects of plant sterols on liver function.
fish oil, inflammation, lipid emulsion, liver, parenteral nutrition, phytosterol
2079-7737
Osowska, Sylwia
41628e22-a0e8-443b-9bbf-90f3459100ae
Kunecki, Marek
fae8485e-6484-463d-b317-45d595763ca0
Sobocki, Jacek
782bca3b-b71c-4d54-acca-55ce2f7a0e9a
Tokarczyk, Joanna
66a44c29-415f-435a-ae4b-67d39d9d9255
Majewska, Krystyna
92942863-4207-48f2-b3cf-c36fc404dd21
Burkacka, Magdalena
d32c99c3-e4bc-46fe-95b8-5b6c36a84c9c
Radkowski, Marek
3fd8a6da-b64f-47e6-b4c5-bde70da3b708
Makarewicz-Wujec, Magdalena
28f8cda8-8835-4f38-a0b1-df8dfacd34b2
Fisk, Helena
2483d346-75dd-41b3-a481-10f8bb39cd9f
Mashnafi, Sultan
85661229-e31e-4538-8ccd-5fc19e65d54a
Baumgartner, Sabine
d27580bb-6071-4dc3-bf13-567035481832
Plat, Jogchum
b503b9d6-0cc5-4292-a845-3dd09f1c1a27
Calder, Philip
1797e54f-378e-4dcb-80a4-3e30018f07a6
Osowska, Sylwia
41628e22-a0e8-443b-9bbf-90f3459100ae
Kunecki, Marek
fae8485e-6484-463d-b317-45d595763ca0
Sobocki, Jacek
782bca3b-b71c-4d54-acca-55ce2f7a0e9a
Tokarczyk, Joanna
66a44c29-415f-435a-ae4b-67d39d9d9255
Majewska, Krystyna
92942863-4207-48f2-b3cf-c36fc404dd21
Burkacka, Magdalena
d32c99c3-e4bc-46fe-95b8-5b6c36a84c9c
Radkowski, Marek
3fd8a6da-b64f-47e6-b4c5-bde70da3b708
Makarewicz-Wujec, Magdalena
28f8cda8-8835-4f38-a0b1-df8dfacd34b2
Fisk, Helena
2483d346-75dd-41b3-a481-10f8bb39cd9f
Mashnafi, Sultan
85661229-e31e-4538-8ccd-5fc19e65d54a
Baumgartner, Sabine
d27580bb-6071-4dc3-bf13-567035481832
Plat, Jogchum
b503b9d6-0cc5-4292-a845-3dd09f1c1a27
Calder, Philip
1797e54f-378e-4dcb-80a4-3e30018f07a6

Osowska, Sylwia, Kunecki, Marek, Sobocki, Jacek, Tokarczyk, Joanna, Majewska, Krystyna, Burkacka, Magdalena, Radkowski, Marek, Makarewicz-Wujec, Magdalena, Fisk, Helena, Mashnafi, Sultan, Baumgartner, Sabine, Plat, Jogchum and Calder, Philip (2022) Potential for omega-3 fatty acids to protect against the adverse effect of phytosterols: comparing laboratory outcomes in adult patients on home parenteral nutrition including different lipid emulsions. Biology, 11 (12), [1699]. (doi:10.3390/biology11121699).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: the effect on liver function markers and inflammation of the different content of phytosterols in lipid emulsions (LEs) used in the parenteral nutrition (PN) regimen of adult home PN (HPN) patients is not clear.

Methods: plasma phytosterol and cytokine concentrations, fatty acid composition, liver function markers, and triglycerides were measured in 58 adult HPN patients receiving one of three different LEs (soybean oil-based: Intralipid; olive oil-based: ClinOleic; containing fish oil: SMOFLipid).

Results: patients receiving Intralipid had higher plasma campesterol and stigmasterol concentrations than those receiving ClinOleic or SMOFLipid. Plasma sterol concentrations were not different between patients receiving ClinOleic and SMOFLipid. Differences in plasma fatty acids reflected the fatty acid composition of the LEs. Markers of liver function did not differ among the three groups. Blood triglycerides were higher with ClinOleic than with Intralipid or SMOFLipid. Total bilirubin correlated positively with the plasma concentrations of two of the phytosterols, ALT correlated positively with one, AST with one, and GGT with three.
Conclusions: liver function markers correlate with plasma plant sterol concentrations in adult HPN patients. Adult HPN patients receiving SMOFLipid are more likely to have liver function markers and triglycerides within the normal range than those receiving ClinOleic or Intralipid. The omega-3 fatty acids in SMOFLipid may act to mitigate the adverse effects of plant sterols on liver function.

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Accepted/In Press date: 21 November 2022
Published date: December 2022
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2022 by the authors.
Keywords: fish oil, inflammation, lipid emulsion, liver, parenteral nutrition, phytosterol

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 478690
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478690
ISSN: 2079-7737
PURE UUID: 9ee43945-841a-471c-b50d-b7b91ad03eb8
ORCID for Helena Fisk: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9534-3246
ORCID for Philip Calder: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6038-710X

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Date deposited: 07 Jul 2023 16:37
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:30

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Contributors

Author: Sylwia Osowska
Author: Marek Kunecki
Author: Jacek Sobocki
Author: Joanna Tokarczyk
Author: Krystyna Majewska
Author: Magdalena Burkacka
Author: Marek Radkowski
Author: Magdalena Makarewicz-Wujec
Author: Helena Fisk ORCID iD
Author: Sultan Mashnafi
Author: Sabine Baumgartner
Author: Jogchum Plat
Author: Philip Calder ORCID iD

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