Adipose Tissue Insulin Resistance Predicts the Severity of Liver Fibrosis in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes and NAFLD
Author:
Kalavalapalli Srilaxmi1, Leiva Eddison Godinez1, Lomonaco Romina1, Chi Xiaofei2, Shrestha Sulav1, Dillard Rachel1, Budd Jeffery3, Romero Jessica Portillo3, Li Christina3, Bril Fernando1ORCID, Samraj George4, Pennington John4, Townsend Petra4, Orlando Frank4, Shetty Shwetha1, Mansour Lydia1, Silva-Sombra Lorena Rodrigues1, Bedossa Pierre5, Malaty John4, Barb Diana1, Gurka Matthew J2, Cusi Kenneth1ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, University of Florida , Gainesville, FL 32610 , USA 2. Department of Pediatrics, University of Florida , Gainesville, FL 32610 , USA 3. Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Florida , Gainesville, FL 32606 , USA 4. Department of Family Medicine, University of Florida , Gainesville, FL 32606 , USA 5. Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, Beaujon Hospital, Pathology Department and University Paris-Diderot , 75116 Paris , France
Abstract
Abstract
Context
Although type 2 diabetes (T2D) is a risk factor for liver fibrosis in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), the specific contribution of insulin resistance (IR) relative to other factors is unknown.
Objective
Assess the impact on liver fibrosis in NAFLD of adipose tissue (adipose tissue insulin resistance index [adipo-IR]) and liver (Homeostatic Model Assessment of Insulin Resistance [HOMA-IR]) IR in people with T2D and NAFLD.
Design
Participants were screened by elastography in the outpatient clinics for hepatic steatosis and fibrosis, including routine metabolites, cytokeratin-18 (a marker of hepatocyte apoptosis/steatohepatitis), and HOMA-IR/adipo-IR.
Setting
University ambulatory care practice.
Participants
A total of 483 participants with T2D.
Intervention
Screening for steatosis and fibrosis with elastography.
Main outcome measures
Liver steatosis (controlled attenuation parameter), fibrosis (liver stiffness measurement), and measurements of IR (adipo-IR, HOMA-IR) and fibrosis (cytokeratin-18).
Results
Clinically significant liver fibrosis (stage F ≥ 2 = liver stiffness measurement ≥8.0 kPa) was found in 11%, having more features of the metabolic syndrome, lower adiponectin, and higher aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase, liver fat, and cytokeratin-18 (P < 0.05-0.01). In multivariable analysis including just clinical variables (model 1), obesity (body mass index [BMI]) had the strongest association with fibrosis (odds ratio, 2.56; CI, 1.87-3.50; P < 0.01). When metabolic measurements and cytokeratin-18 were included (model 2), only BMI, AST, and liver fat remained significant. When fibrosis stage was adjusted for BMI, AST, and steatosis (model 3), only Adipo-IR remained strongly associated with fibrosis (OR, 1.51; CI, 1.05-2.16; P = 0.03), but not BMI, hepatic IR, or steatosis.
Conclusions
These findings pinpoint to the central role of dysfunctional, insulin-resistant adipose tissue to advanced fibrosis in T2D, beyond simply BMI or steatosis. The clinical implication is that targeting adipose tissue should be the priority of treatment in NAFLD.
Publisher
The Endocrine Society
Subject
Biochemistry (medical),Clinical Biochemistry,Endocrinology,Biochemistry,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Reference31 articles.
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