Abstract

Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) was shown to also occur in lean and underweight patients. So far, the prevalence of NAFLD in underweight individuals with and without inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is insufficiently enlightened. In this cross-sectional age, gender and disease-matched case-control study, underweight patients (BMI<18.5 kg/m2) with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), who underwent abdominal MRI at 1.5 T/3 T with fat-saturated fast-spin-echo imaging from 10/2005-07/2018 were analysed (control-to-case-ratio 1:1, n = 130). All patients were additionally investigated for duration, history of surgery, medical treatment, laboratory values, liver and spleen diameters. On MRI, liver fat was quantified by two observers based on the relative signal loss on T2-weighted fast spin-echo MR images with fat saturation compared to images without fat saturation. The prevalence of NAFLD/liver steatosis, defined as a measured intrahepatic fat content of at least 5%, was significantly higher in underweight IBD patients than in normal weight patients (87.6% versus 21.5%, p<0.001). Compared to the cases, the liver fat content of the controls was reduced by -0.19 units on average (-19%; 95%Cl: -0.20; -0.14). Similar results were obtained for the subgroup of non-IBD individuals (n = 12; -0.25 units on average (-25%); 95%Cl: -0.35; -0.14). Patients with extremely low body weight (BMI <17.5 kg/m2) showed the highest liver fat content (+0.15 units on average (+15%) compared to underweight patients with a BMI of 17.5–18.5 kg/m2 (p<0.05)). Furthermore, underweight patients showed slightly increased liver enzymes and liver diameters. There were no indications of significant differences in disease duration, type of medications or surgery between cases and controls and also, there were no significant differences between observers or field strengths (p>0.05). The prevalence of liver steatosis was higher among underweight IBD and non-IBD patients compared to normal weight controls. Also, underweight patients showed slightly increased liver enzymes and liver diameters, hinting at initial metabolic disturbances.

Highlights

  • Due to the acknowledged effects of liver fat on the signal intensity of fat-saturated magnetic resonance (MR) images, we considered the measurement of relative signal intensity loss to be an adequate approximation of the actual difference in the amount of liver fat in underweight and normal weight patients

  • The prevalence of Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD)/steatosis, which is defined as a measured intrahepatic fat content of at least 5%, is shown to be significantly higher in underweight patients compared to normal weight patients (88.5% versus 23%, p < 0.001)

  • While 11 underweight patients (18%) showed moderate steatosis with a liver fat content of more than 33%, there was only 1 (1.6%) normal weight control with a liver fat content of more than 25%

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of this study was to test whether low weight is associated with steatosis on magnetic resonance (MR) imaging

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion

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