Fatty liver found to be common in
adolescents.
by Kirn, Timothy F.
SALT LAKE CITY -- Fatty liver is found in almost one in five older
adolescents, a prevalence not much different from that found in adults,
Dr. Jeffrey B. Schwimmer said at the annual meeting of the North
American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and
Nutrition.
That is a problem, because many of those adolescents also have
steatohepatitis, and there are no treatments proven to be of reliable
benefit, he said.
It is hard to know how many children have steatosis or
steatohepatitis because imaging techniques are not very sensitive. Also,
many patients--even those with steatohepatitis--do not have elevated
liver enzymes, which might prompt a biopsy, said Dr. Schwimmer of the
department of pediatrics at the University of California, San Diego.
Prior studies estimated the prevalence of fatty liver--which was
checked for only in obese children--at anywhere from 10% to 77%, and
case series have suggested that anywhere from 3% to 10% of children
already have cirrhosis when they are biopsied.
So Dr. Schwimmer and his colleagues reviewed the liver slides from
autopsies of every child autopsied by the medical examiner in San Diego
County from 1993 to 2003. They excluded those children who might be
likely to have liver toxicity, such as those with alcohol in their
systems, and those who had a condition affecting the liver (Pediatrics
2006;118:1388-93).
In 743 children, most of whom died in accidents or shootings, 13%
were found to have a fatty liver. A fatty liver was defined as a liver
in which 5% or more of hepatocytes contained a droplet of fat bigger
than the cell nucleus. The prevalence ranged from a little less than 1%
in children aged 2-4 years up to 17% in those aged 15-19 years. In
addition, 82% of the children with fatty liver were male.
Steatohepatitis was found in 23% of the children with fatty liver,
or 3% of the total population, a percentage that, translated to the
entire population, would suggest that 65 million children in the United
States have a fatty liver.
Fatty liver was not found only in heavy children. It also was
present in 5% of the normal-weight children, compared with 16% of
overweight children and 38% of obese children.
Fatty liver was more common in Hispanic and Asian children (11% and
10%, respectively) than in white children (9%), and was almost
nonexistent in black children (1%). "Blacks seem to be incredibly
protected from developing fatty liver disease" regardless of
obesity, Dr. Schwimmer said.
The benefits of any kind of treatment have not been established, he
added.
Three studies have shown that weight loss can improve an elevated
ALT level. But close examination of one of those studies shows that the
benefit might be limited. In that study, 84 patients with biopsy-proven
nonalcoholic fatty liver disease were followed for 1 year, during which
they received moderate-intensity weight management (Hepatology
2006;44:458-65).
In all, 77% of those children were overweight or obese at the
start, but 35 children did not lose a significant amount of weight over
the year, and only 5 lost weight and had a normalizing of their ALT, Dr.
Schwimmer said.
Metformin also seems to be of limited benefit in these patients.
Dr. Schwimmer conducted a study of 10 metformin-treated obese
adolescents and found that after 24 weeks of treatment only 40% achieved
a normal ALT level. MR spectroscopy showed some reduction in liver fat,
but those livers did not become "normal," he said (Aliment.
Pharmacol. Ther. 2005; 21:871-9). "I know we all want to do
something to help these children; unfortunately there is an awful lot we
don't know yet about exactly what that entails," he said.
A large ongoing study sponsored by the National Institute of
Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases may help provide an answer.
That study is looking at either vitamin E or metformin treatment, versus
placebo, in pediatric patients, he said.
BY TIMOTHY F. KIRN
Sacramento Bureau
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