Weight
loss improves fatty liver disease, researchers find
Study
discovers how much weight loss is needed to make a difference
ST.
LOUIS In a recent study, Saint Louis University researchers
found that weight loss of at least 9 percent helped patients reverse
a type of liver disease known as nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH),
a finding that will allow doctors to give patients specific weight-loss
goals that are likely to improve their livers. The finding comes
from a study of the diet drug orlistat (also known as Xenical and
Alli), which did not itself improve liver disease.
Brent
Neuschwander-Tetri, M.D., a hepatologist at Saint Louis University
Liver Center and study researcher said, "It's a helpful study
because we can now give patients a benchmark, a line they need to
cross to see improvement."
The
study looked at patients with NASH, which is a type of liver disease
characterized by excessive fat, causing inflammation and damage
in the liver. Researchers set out to see if orlistat, which limits
fat absorption, along with calorie restriction would lead to weight
loss and improve liver disease in overweight patients with NASH,
which was determined by a liver biopsy.
Fifty
patients participated in the study, with all instructed to consume
a 1,400 calorie diet and vitamin E, and half also receiving orlistat
for 36 weeks, at which time liver biopsies were repeated.
While
orlistat itself was not linked directly to improved liver health,
weight loss was, and, further, researchers were able to pin-point
the percentage of weight loss needed to improve liver damage.
Patients
who lost 5 percent or more of body weight over nine months showed
improvement in insulin resistance and steatosis (fat accumulation
in the liver), and those who lost at least 9 percent showed reversal
of their liver damage.
The
data about the drug orlistat was less clear. Those in the orlistat
group lost 8.3 percent body weight and those in the other group
lost 6 percent body weight, not a statistically significant difference.
As for liver disease, orlistat did not itself improve liver enzymes,
measures of insulin resistance or reverse liver damage.
"The
bottom line is that weight loss can help improve fatty liver disease,"
said Neuschwander-Tetri, who is a professor of internal medicine
at Saint Louis University. "Now we know how much weight loss
is needed for improvement, and we can give patients specific goals
as they work to improve their health."
###
Published
in the January edition of Hepatology, the study was conducted at
Saint Louis University and Brooke Army Medical Center and was funded
by Roche Pharmaceuticals, the maker of orlistat.
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