Cargando…

THU642 Progression To Cirrhosis And All-cause Mortality Are Increased In Postmenopausal Women With NAFLD

Disclosure: C. Izzi-Engbeaya: None. P. Eng: None. A. Dunin-Borkowska: None. R. Forlano: None. B.H. Mullish: None. G. Sigon: None. V. Lin: None. T. Tan: None. M. Yee: None. P. Manousou: None. W.S. Dhillo: None. Background: Up to 30% of adults worldwide are estimated to have Non-alcoholic Liver Diseas...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Izzi-Engbeaya, Chioma, Eng, Pei Chia, Dunin-Borkowska, Aleksandra, Forlano, Roberta, Mullish, Benjamin H, Sigon, Giordano, Lin, Vicky, Tan, Tricia, Yee, Michael, Manousou, Pinelopi, Dhillo, Waljit Singh
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10554320/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad114.1546
_version_ 1785116384549666816
author Izzi-Engbeaya, Chioma
Eng, Pei Chia
Dunin-Borkowska, Aleksandra
Forlano, Roberta
Mullish, Benjamin H
Sigon, Giordano
Lin, Vicky
Tan, Tricia
Yee, Michael
Manousou, Pinelopi
Dhillo, Waljit Singh
author_facet Izzi-Engbeaya, Chioma
Eng, Pei Chia
Dunin-Borkowska, Aleksandra
Forlano, Roberta
Mullish, Benjamin H
Sigon, Giordano
Lin, Vicky
Tan, Tricia
Yee, Michael
Manousou, Pinelopi
Dhillo, Waljit Singh
author_sort Izzi-Engbeaya, Chioma
collection PubMed
description Disclosure: C. Izzi-Engbeaya: None. P. Eng: None. A. Dunin-Borkowska: None. R. Forlano: None. B.H. Mullish: None. G. Sigon: None. V. Lin: None. T. Tan: None. M. Yee: None. P. Manousou: None. W.S. Dhillo: None. Background: Up to 30% of adults worldwide are estimated to have Non-alcoholic Liver Disease (NAFLD), ranging from hepatic steatosis alone to steatohepatitis and cirrhosis. Due to underlying metabolic and hepatic pathology, patients with NAFLD require specialist input from Endocrinologists and Hepatologists. Worryingly, postmenopausal women with NAFLD are more likely to progress to advanced fibrosis and experience more frequent liver decompensation events than men, but the causes of these disparate outcomes are incompletely understood. Methodology: We performed a retrospective cohort study utilising a database of consecutive patients managed in the multidisciplinary Metabolic Endocrinology and Hepatology Clinic at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust (London, UK) who had their first clinic review between January 2009 and December 2020. NAFLD was diagnosed clinically or histologically. Clinical, biochemical and histological data were collected up to December 2022. Postmenopausal women were defined as women aged ≥55 years at their initial clinic visit. Cirrhosis was diagnosed based on a combination of clinical and radiological features or based on histology, when available. Multivariate logistic regression was performed to identify variables independently associated with cirrhosis. Statistical significance was set at p<0.05. Results: 739 patients were included in this study (n=286 female, n=244 White, median (IQR) age: 52 (42-60) years), with a median follow-up of 6 (3-8) years. All-cause mortality was highest amongst postmenopausal women (proportion who died during follow-up: men <55y 2% vs men ≥55y 9% vs women <55y 0.8% vs women ≥55y 14%, p<0.0001). Postmenopausal women (n=153) had increased risks of cirrhosis when compared to age-matched men (cirrhosis: OR 2.8 (95%CI 1.1-7.2), p<0.05). Postmenopausal women had lower ALT levels at initial clinic review (median (IQR) ALT IU/L: women ≥55y 48 (30-73) vs men ≥55y 54 (41-77), p <0.05), and lower alcohol intake than age-matched men (p<0.0001). Similar proportions of postmenopausal women and age-matched men had a baseline fibrosis stage ≥2 (82% vs 78% respectively, p=0.55). Initial prevalence of obesity (p=0.63), type 2 diabetes (p=0.15), cardiovascular disease (p=0.21), as well as use of GLP-1 receptor agonists (p=0.17) and SGLT2 inhibitors (p>0.99) were similar between these two groups. There were insufficient data on reproductive hormone use for this variable to be included in the analyses. Conclusions: Despite presenting to a specialised secondary care clinic with similar co-morbidities, liver fibrosis stage, and receiving similar treatments, being a postmenopausal woman in our diverse cohort is associated with worse outcomes than being a man aged ≥55years. Therefore, tailored and/or personalised management strategies may be required to improve outcomes in postmenopausal women with NAFLD. Presentation: Thursday, June 15, 2023
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10554320
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-105543202023-10-06 THU642 Progression To Cirrhosis And All-cause Mortality Are Increased In Postmenopausal Women With NAFLD Izzi-Engbeaya, Chioma Eng, Pei Chia Dunin-Borkowska, Aleksandra Forlano, Roberta Mullish, Benjamin H Sigon, Giordano Lin, Vicky Tan, Tricia Yee, Michael Manousou, Pinelopi Dhillo, Waljit Singh J Endocr Soc Reproductive Endocrinology Disclosure: C. Izzi-Engbeaya: None. P. Eng: None. A. Dunin-Borkowska: None. R. Forlano: None. B.H. Mullish: None. G. Sigon: None. V. Lin: None. T. Tan: None. M. Yee: None. P. Manousou: None. W.S. Dhillo: None. Background: Up to 30% of adults worldwide are estimated to have Non-alcoholic Liver Disease (NAFLD), ranging from hepatic steatosis alone to steatohepatitis and cirrhosis. Due to underlying metabolic and hepatic pathology, patients with NAFLD require specialist input from Endocrinologists and Hepatologists. Worryingly, postmenopausal women with NAFLD are more likely to progress to advanced fibrosis and experience more frequent liver decompensation events than men, but the causes of these disparate outcomes are incompletely understood. Methodology: We performed a retrospective cohort study utilising a database of consecutive patients managed in the multidisciplinary Metabolic Endocrinology and Hepatology Clinic at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust (London, UK) who had their first clinic review between January 2009 and December 2020. NAFLD was diagnosed clinically or histologically. Clinical, biochemical and histological data were collected up to December 2022. Postmenopausal women were defined as women aged ≥55 years at their initial clinic visit. Cirrhosis was diagnosed based on a combination of clinical and radiological features or based on histology, when available. Multivariate logistic regression was performed to identify variables independently associated with cirrhosis. Statistical significance was set at p<0.05. Results: 739 patients were included in this study (n=286 female, n=244 White, median (IQR) age: 52 (42-60) years), with a median follow-up of 6 (3-8) years. All-cause mortality was highest amongst postmenopausal women (proportion who died during follow-up: men <55y 2% vs men ≥55y 9% vs women <55y 0.8% vs women ≥55y 14%, p<0.0001). Postmenopausal women (n=153) had increased risks of cirrhosis when compared to age-matched men (cirrhosis: OR 2.8 (95%CI 1.1-7.2), p<0.05). Postmenopausal women had lower ALT levels at initial clinic review (median (IQR) ALT IU/L: women ≥55y 48 (30-73) vs men ≥55y 54 (41-77), p <0.05), and lower alcohol intake than age-matched men (p<0.0001). Similar proportions of postmenopausal women and age-matched men had a baseline fibrosis stage ≥2 (82% vs 78% respectively, p=0.55). Initial prevalence of obesity (p=0.63), type 2 diabetes (p=0.15), cardiovascular disease (p=0.21), as well as use of GLP-1 receptor agonists (p=0.17) and SGLT2 inhibitors (p>0.99) were similar between these two groups. There were insufficient data on reproductive hormone use for this variable to be included in the analyses. Conclusions: Despite presenting to a specialised secondary care clinic with similar co-morbidities, liver fibrosis stage, and receiving similar treatments, being a postmenopausal woman in our diverse cohort is associated with worse outcomes than being a man aged ≥55years. Therefore, tailored and/or personalised management strategies may be required to improve outcomes in postmenopausal women with NAFLD. Presentation: Thursday, June 15, 2023 Oxford University Press 2023-10-05 /pmc/articles/PMC10554320/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad114.1546 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Reproductive Endocrinology
Izzi-Engbeaya, Chioma
Eng, Pei Chia
Dunin-Borkowska, Aleksandra
Forlano, Roberta
Mullish, Benjamin H
Sigon, Giordano
Lin, Vicky
Tan, Tricia
Yee, Michael
Manousou, Pinelopi
Dhillo, Waljit Singh
THU642 Progression To Cirrhosis And All-cause Mortality Are Increased In Postmenopausal Women With NAFLD
title THU642 Progression To Cirrhosis And All-cause Mortality Are Increased In Postmenopausal Women With NAFLD
title_full THU642 Progression To Cirrhosis And All-cause Mortality Are Increased In Postmenopausal Women With NAFLD
title_fullStr THU642 Progression To Cirrhosis And All-cause Mortality Are Increased In Postmenopausal Women With NAFLD
title_full_unstemmed THU642 Progression To Cirrhosis And All-cause Mortality Are Increased In Postmenopausal Women With NAFLD
title_short THU642 Progression To Cirrhosis And All-cause Mortality Are Increased In Postmenopausal Women With NAFLD
title_sort thu642 progression to cirrhosis and all-cause mortality are increased in postmenopausal women with nafld
topic Reproductive Endocrinology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10554320/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad114.1546
work_keys_str_mv AT izziengbeayachioma thu642progressiontocirrhosisandallcausemortalityareincreasedinpostmenopausalwomenwithnafld
AT engpeichia thu642progressiontocirrhosisandallcausemortalityareincreasedinpostmenopausalwomenwithnafld
AT duninborkowskaaleksandra thu642progressiontocirrhosisandallcausemortalityareincreasedinpostmenopausalwomenwithnafld
AT forlanoroberta thu642progressiontocirrhosisandallcausemortalityareincreasedinpostmenopausalwomenwithnafld
AT mullishbenjaminh thu642progressiontocirrhosisandallcausemortalityareincreasedinpostmenopausalwomenwithnafld
AT sigongiordano thu642progressiontocirrhosisandallcausemortalityareincreasedinpostmenopausalwomenwithnafld
AT linvicky thu642progressiontocirrhosisandallcausemortalityareincreasedinpostmenopausalwomenwithnafld
AT tantricia thu642progressiontocirrhosisandallcausemortalityareincreasedinpostmenopausalwomenwithnafld
AT yeemichael thu642progressiontocirrhosisandallcausemortalityareincreasedinpostmenopausalwomenwithnafld
AT manousoupinelopi thu642progressiontocirrhosisandallcausemortalityareincreasedinpostmenopausalwomenwithnafld
AT dhillowaljitsingh thu642progressiontocirrhosisandallcausemortalityareincreasedinpostmenopausalwomenwithnafld