Association of statins with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in patients with diabetes

Author:

Shah Raj123,Kong Alexander3,De Melo Silvio4,Boktor Moheb5,Henriquez Richard123,Mandalia Amar4,Samant Hrishikesh6,Alvarez Carlos A.7,Mansi Ishak A.13

Affiliation:

1. Education Services, Orlando VA Healthcare System, Orlando, FL, USA

2. University of Central Florida/HCA Florida Healthcare, Greater Orlando, FL, USA

3. Department of Internal Medicine, University of Central Florida College of Medicine, Orlando, FL, USA

4. Section of Gastroenterology, Orlando VA Healthcare System, Orlando, FL, USA

5. Digestive and Liver Diseases Division. University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX

6. Department of Hepatology, Ochsner Medical Clinic, New Orleans, LA, USA

7. Department of Pharmacy Practice and Center of Excellence in Real-world Evidence, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, Dallas, TX, USA

Abstract

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the most common cause of chronic liver disease in patients with diabetes; limited data suggested that statins may reduce the risk of NAFLD progression. This study aimed to examine the association between statins and the development or progression of NAFLD in veterans with diabetes. In a new-user negative control design, we conducted a retrospective propensity score (PS)-matched cohort study of patients with diabetes between 2003 and 2015. After excluding patients with other causes of liver disease, we formed PS using 85 characteristics. The primary outcome was a composite NAFLD progression outcome. Primary analysis examined odds of outcome in PS-matched cohort. Post-hoc analysis included a PS-matched cohort of statin users with intensive lowering of low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (LDL-C) vs low-intensity lowering. We matched 34,102 pairs from 300,739 statin users and 38,038 non-users. The composite outcome occurred in 8.8% of statin users and 8.6% of non-users (odds ratio (OR) 1.02, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 0.97–1.08). In the post-hoc analysis, intensive lowering of LDL-C compared to low-intensity showed increased NAFLD progression (OR 1.21, 95% CI 1.13–1.30). This study showed that statin use in patients with diabetes was not associated with decreased or increased risk of NAFLD progression. Intensive LDL-C lowering, compared to low-intensity LDL-C lowering, was associated with an increased risk of NAFLD progression.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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