Cargando…

MON-164 The Non-insulin-based METS-IR Index Combined With Liver Transaminases Improves Prediction Of Fatty Liver And Fibrosis

BACKGROUND: Liver fat content (LFC) evaluation requires histologic examination of liver biopsy specimens, which is invasive and costly. Non-invasive alternatives to assess LFC, which include spectroscopy-MRI (MRI-S) and transient elastography (TE), are limited by cost and complexity. Laboratory-base...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bello-Chavolla, Omar, Vargas-Vazquez, Arsenio, Almeda-Valdes, Paloma, Antonio-Villa, Neftali, Aguilar Salinas, Carlos
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Endocrine Society 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6551077/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/js.2019-MON-164
_version_ 1783424329436889088
author Bello-Chavolla, Omar
Vargas-Vazquez, Arsenio
Almeda-Valdes, Paloma
Antonio-Villa, Neftali
Aguilar Salinas, Carlos
author_facet Bello-Chavolla, Omar
Vargas-Vazquez, Arsenio
Almeda-Valdes, Paloma
Antonio-Villa, Neftali
Aguilar Salinas, Carlos
author_sort Bello-Chavolla, Omar
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Liver fat content (LFC) evaluation requires histologic examination of liver biopsy specimens, which is invasive and costly. Non-invasive alternatives to assess LFC, which include spectroscopy-MRI (MRI-S) and transient elastography (TE), are limited by cost and complexity. Laboratory-based surrogates to estimate LFC have been developed and include the AST/ALT ratio, Fatty Liver Index (FLI) and NAFLD score. Previous studies have shown that the non-insulin-based METS-IR index is associated with LFC. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate diagnostic performance of METS-IR combined with liver transaminase assessment to estimate LFC. METHODS: We assessed subjects with and without T2D who had a laboratory and MRI-S evaluation. Using linear regression, we developed an estimate of LFC using METS-IR and liver function tests; prediction was improved including sex and T2D using non-linear regression and bootstrap cross-validation (n=2,000). We contrasted the FLI and NAFLD scores with METS-IR to estimate LFC using partial correlation and to detect NAFLD (LFC>5.5% by MRI-S) using areas AUROC. This assessment was validated in a cohort of 197 subjects who underwent TE and a cohort of 57 subjects in whom liver biopsy specimens were collected during bariatric surgery to assess predictive performance for both liver steatosis and fibrosis. RESULTS: In the discovery cohort, we included 56 healthy subjects and 58 with T2D. We modeled the Metabolic Score for Liver Fat Content (METS-LFC) and LFC (r(2)=0.548) as: METS-LFC=(METS-IR*ALT)/(2*AST), Estimated LFC (%)=-3.524+[0.340*METS-LFC]+1.529(T2D)-1.620(Sex). NAFLD was present in 33 subjects (28.9%) of the discovery cohort. The correlation between estimated and observed LFC was higher for METS-LFC (ρ=0.735 95%CI 0.608-0.828) compared to other estimates as was the AUROC (AUC=0.869 95%CI 0.797-0.941). The validation cohort was composed by lean and obese individuals who had METS-LFC and TE; we observed increasing estimated LFC using METS-LFC with TE-derived liver steatosis categories (p<0.001). METS-IR had the better predictive performance for TE-diagnosed steatosis (AUC 0.860 95%CI 0.807-0.912), whilst FLI, METS-IR and METS-LFC had similarly predictive performance for liver fibrosis. Finally, we validated this index in liver biopsy specimens from subjects with average BMI of 45.54±7.47 kg/m2, 33 patients had steatosis and NASH histologic evidence and 10 had biopsy-proven NASH. Compared to biopsy specimens METS-LFC (AUC=0.759, p=0.004) was superior to FLI (AUC=0.615, p=0.201) and the NAFLD score (AUC=0.746, p=0.006) to detect liver steatosis. CONCLUSION: Combined estimation of METS-IR and liver transaminases improves prediction of liver fat content by MRI, TE and biopsy-proven liver steatosis.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6551077
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher Endocrine Society
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-65510772019-06-13 MON-164 The Non-insulin-based METS-IR Index Combined With Liver Transaminases Improves Prediction Of Fatty Liver And Fibrosis Bello-Chavolla, Omar Vargas-Vazquez, Arsenio Almeda-Valdes, Paloma Antonio-Villa, Neftali Aguilar Salinas, Carlos J Endocr Soc Diabetes Mellitus and Glucose Metabolism BACKGROUND: Liver fat content (LFC) evaluation requires histologic examination of liver biopsy specimens, which is invasive and costly. Non-invasive alternatives to assess LFC, which include spectroscopy-MRI (MRI-S) and transient elastography (TE), are limited by cost and complexity. Laboratory-based surrogates to estimate LFC have been developed and include the AST/ALT ratio, Fatty Liver Index (FLI) and NAFLD score. Previous studies have shown that the non-insulin-based METS-IR index is associated with LFC. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate diagnostic performance of METS-IR combined with liver transaminase assessment to estimate LFC. METHODS: We assessed subjects with and without T2D who had a laboratory and MRI-S evaluation. Using linear regression, we developed an estimate of LFC using METS-IR and liver function tests; prediction was improved including sex and T2D using non-linear regression and bootstrap cross-validation (n=2,000). We contrasted the FLI and NAFLD scores with METS-IR to estimate LFC using partial correlation and to detect NAFLD (LFC>5.5% by MRI-S) using areas AUROC. This assessment was validated in a cohort of 197 subjects who underwent TE and a cohort of 57 subjects in whom liver biopsy specimens were collected during bariatric surgery to assess predictive performance for both liver steatosis and fibrosis. RESULTS: In the discovery cohort, we included 56 healthy subjects and 58 with T2D. We modeled the Metabolic Score for Liver Fat Content (METS-LFC) and LFC (r(2)=0.548) as: METS-LFC=(METS-IR*ALT)/(2*AST), Estimated LFC (%)=-3.524+[0.340*METS-LFC]+1.529(T2D)-1.620(Sex). NAFLD was present in 33 subjects (28.9%) of the discovery cohort. The correlation between estimated and observed LFC was higher for METS-LFC (ρ=0.735 95%CI 0.608-0.828) compared to other estimates as was the AUROC (AUC=0.869 95%CI 0.797-0.941). The validation cohort was composed by lean and obese individuals who had METS-LFC and TE; we observed increasing estimated LFC using METS-LFC with TE-derived liver steatosis categories (p<0.001). METS-IR had the better predictive performance for TE-diagnosed steatosis (AUC 0.860 95%CI 0.807-0.912), whilst FLI, METS-IR and METS-LFC had similarly predictive performance for liver fibrosis. Finally, we validated this index in liver biopsy specimens from subjects with average BMI of 45.54±7.47 kg/m2, 33 patients had steatosis and NASH histologic evidence and 10 had biopsy-proven NASH. Compared to biopsy specimens METS-LFC (AUC=0.759, p=0.004) was superior to FLI (AUC=0.615, p=0.201) and the NAFLD score (AUC=0.746, p=0.006) to detect liver steatosis. CONCLUSION: Combined estimation of METS-IR and liver transaminases improves prediction of liver fat content by MRI, TE and biopsy-proven liver steatosis. Endocrine Society 2019-04-30 /pmc/articles/PMC6551077/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/js.2019-MON-164 Text en Copyright © 2019 Endocrine Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This article has been published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial, No-Derivatives License (CC BY-NC-ND; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Diabetes Mellitus and Glucose Metabolism
Bello-Chavolla, Omar
Vargas-Vazquez, Arsenio
Almeda-Valdes, Paloma
Antonio-Villa, Neftali
Aguilar Salinas, Carlos
MON-164 The Non-insulin-based METS-IR Index Combined With Liver Transaminases Improves Prediction Of Fatty Liver And Fibrosis
title MON-164 The Non-insulin-based METS-IR Index Combined With Liver Transaminases Improves Prediction Of Fatty Liver And Fibrosis
title_full MON-164 The Non-insulin-based METS-IR Index Combined With Liver Transaminases Improves Prediction Of Fatty Liver And Fibrosis
title_fullStr MON-164 The Non-insulin-based METS-IR Index Combined With Liver Transaminases Improves Prediction Of Fatty Liver And Fibrosis
title_full_unstemmed MON-164 The Non-insulin-based METS-IR Index Combined With Liver Transaminases Improves Prediction Of Fatty Liver And Fibrosis
title_short MON-164 The Non-insulin-based METS-IR Index Combined With Liver Transaminases Improves Prediction Of Fatty Liver And Fibrosis
title_sort mon-164 the non-insulin-based mets-ir index combined with liver transaminases improves prediction of fatty liver and fibrosis
topic Diabetes Mellitus and Glucose Metabolism
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6551077/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/js.2019-MON-164
work_keys_str_mv AT bellochavollaomar mon164thenoninsulinbasedmetsirindexcombinedwithlivertransaminasesimprovespredictionoffattyliverandfibrosis
AT vargasvazquezarsenio mon164thenoninsulinbasedmetsirindexcombinedwithlivertransaminasesimprovespredictionoffattyliverandfibrosis
AT almedavaldespaloma mon164thenoninsulinbasedmetsirindexcombinedwithlivertransaminasesimprovespredictionoffattyliverandfibrosis
AT antoniovillaneftali mon164thenoninsulinbasedmetsirindexcombinedwithlivertransaminasesimprovespredictionoffattyliverandfibrosis
AT aguilarsalinascarlos mon164thenoninsulinbasedmetsirindexcombinedwithlivertransaminasesimprovespredictionoffattyliverandfibrosis