Differential fuel utilization in liver transplant recipients and its relationship with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.
Publication/Presentation Date
6-1-2022
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Metabolic flexibility is the ability to match biofuel availability to utilization. Reduced metabolic flexibility, or lower fatty acid (FA) oxidation in the fasted state, is associated with obesity. The present study evaluated metabolic flexibility after liver transplantation (LT).
METHODS: Patients receiving LT for non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) (n = 35) and non-NASH (n = 10) were enrolled. NASH was chosen as these patients are at the highest risk of metabolic complications. Metabolic flexibility was measured using whole-body calorimetry and expressed as respiratory quotient (RQ), which ranges from 0.7 (pure FA oxidation) to 1.0 is (carbohydrate oxidation).
RESULTS: The two cohorts were similar except for a higher prevalence of obesity and diabetes in the NASH cohort. Post-prandially, RQ increased in both cohorts (i.e. greater carbohydrate utilization) but peak RQ and time at peak RQ was higher in the NASH cohort. Fasting RQ in NASH was significantly higher (0.845 vs. 0.772, p < .001), indicative of impaired FA utilization. In subgroup analysis of the NASH cohort, body mass index but not liver fat content (MRI-PDFF) was an independent predictor of fasting RQ. In NASH, fasting RQ inversely correlated with fat-free muscle volume and directly with visceral adipose tissue.
CONCLUSION: Reduced metabolic flexibility in patients transplanted for NASH cirrhosis may precede the development of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease after LT.
Volume
42
Issue
6
First Page
1401
Last Page
1409
ISSN
1478-3231
Published In/Presented At
Siddiqui, M. S., Patel, S., Forsgren, M., Bui, A. T., Shen, S., Syed, T., Boyett, S., Chen, S., Sanyal, A. J., Wolver, S., Kirkman, D., Celi, F. S., & Bhati, C. S. (2022). Differential fuel utilization in liver transplant recipients and its relationship with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. Liver international : official journal of the International Association for the Study of the Liver, 42(6), 1401–1409. https://doi.org/10.1111/liv.15178
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
35129295
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article