| 30 Octobre 2013
 New research suggests that estrogen protects women with nonalcoholic  steatohepatitis (NASH) from severe liver fibrosis.  According to the  study published online in Hepatology,  a journal of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases,  men are at higher risk of more severe fibrosis compared to women prior  to menopause, but liver fibrosis severity is similar in men and  post-menopausal women.   Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) includes a range of liver  disorders from simple fatty liver to inflammation, fibrosis, and  cirrhosis.  With the rapid rise in obesity, diabetes and metabolic  syndrome, the prevalence of NAFLD—the result of insulin resistance—has  also steadily increased.  In fact, studies suggest that the NAFLD  prevalence is 10% to 30%, making it the most common liver disease in the  U.S.   “While most NAFLD patients have a mild disease known as fatty liver  or hepatic steatosis, some patients present with NASH, which is more  severe and increases overall mortality,” explains Dr. Ayako Suzuki with  the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System and University of  Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little Rock, the  lead author of the  present study.  “Our study aim was to investigate whether gender and  menopause significantly impact fibrosis severity among adult patients  with NAFLD.”   The research team analyzed data from 541 adults with NASH who were  seen at Duke University Liver Clinics and the Duke Metabolic and Weight  Loss Surgery Program.  The mean age of subjects was 48 years, with 35%  of the group being men, 28% pre-menopausal women and 37% post-menopausal  women.   Findings indicate that 22% of the cohort had advanced fibrosis.   After adjusting for known predictors of fibrosis, the risk for greater  fibrosis severity in post-menopausal women and men vs. pre-menopausal  women was 1.4-fold and 1.6-fold, respectively.  Furthermore, when  dividing the cohort at age 50, which is the average age at menopause in  the US, the risk for greater fibrosis severity in men vs. women before  age 50 was 1.8-fold, while after the age 50 the risk was reduced to  1.2-fold.  “Our findings suggest a protective effect from estrogen against  development of severe fibrosis,” concludes Dr. Suzuki.  “Further study  of the impact of estrogen on fibrosis progression in NASH patients in  needed.”   This study was funded by grants from the National Institute on  Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (5RC2 AA019399), and the National  Institutes of Health (NIH), National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive  and Kidney Disease (NIDDK) (U01-DK57149 and K23-DK062116). 
Severity of Fibrosis Similar in Men and Post-menopausal Women