Fatty Pancreas and Cardiometabolic Risk: Response of Ectopic Fat to Lifestyle and Surgical Interventions

Author:

Leiu Kok12ORCID,Poppitt Sally1234ORCID,Miles-Chan Jennifer124ORCID,Sequeira Ivana12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Human Nutrition Unit, School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland, Auckland 1024, New Zealand

2. High Value Nutrition, National Science Challenge, Auckland 1010, New Zealand

3. Department of Medicine, University of Auckland, Auckland 1010, New Zealand

4. Riddet Centre of Research Excellence (CoRE) for Food and Nutrition, Palmerston North 4442, New Zealand

Abstract

Ectopic fat accumulation in non-adipose organs, such as the pancreas and liver, is associated with an increased risk of cardiometabolic disease. While clinical trials have focused on interventions to decrease body weight and liver fat, ameliorating pancreatic fat can be crucial but successful intervention strategies are not yet defined. We identified twenty-two published studies which quantified pancreatic fat during dietary, physical activity, and/or bariatric surgery interventions targeted at body weight and adipose mass loss alongside their subsequent effect on metabolic outcomes. Thirteen studies reported a significant decrease in body weight, utilising weight-loss diets (n = 2), very low-energy diets (VLED) (n = 2), isocaloric diets (n = 1), a combination of diet and physical activity (n = 2), and bariatric surgery (n = 5) including a comparison with VLED (n = 1). Surgical intervention achieved the largest decrease in pancreatic fat (range: −18.2% to −67.2%) vs. a combination of weight-loss diets, isocaloric diets, and/or VLED (range: −10.2% to −42.3%) vs. diet and physical activity combined (range: −0.6% to −3.9%), with a concurrent decrease in metabolic outcomes. While surgical intervention purportedly is the most effective strategy to decrease pancreas fat content and improve cardiometabolic health, the procedure is invasive and may not be accessible to most individuals. Given that dietary intervention is the cornerstone for the prevention of adverse metabolic health, the alternative approaches appear to be the use of weight-loss diets or VLED meal replacements, which are shown to decrease pancreatic fat and associated cardiometabolic risk.

Funder

New Zealand National Science Challenge High Value Nutrition Program (NSC-HVN), Ministry for Business, Innovation and Employment

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

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