| May
18, 2004
UCSD Researchers Determine Fatty
Liver
Disease Different In Obese Children Than In Adults
By Sue Pondrom
Potentially life-threatening
non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) in obese children
has distinct characteristics, often different from those found
in adults, according to a University of California, San Diego
(UCSD) School of Medicine study led by Jeffrey Schwimmer, M.D.,
assistant professor of pediatrics.
Presented May 18, 2004
at the annual Digestive Disease Week meeting in New Orleans,
the largest international gathering of gastroenterology and
hepatology physicians, surgeons and researchers, the findings
describe a new paradigm for diagnosis of this common condition
found in obese children and offer the potential for improved
care.
Between 1997 and 2003,
the investigators identified 100 children ages 2 to 18 with
biopsy-proven NAFLD. They found clearly different patterns and
locations of liver scarring and inflammation in children as
compared to that typically seen in adults. Focusing on the most
severe form of NAFLD, called nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, or
NASH, the researchers divided it into two types which they named
Type 1 (the classic adult pattern) and Type 2 (a proposed pediatric
pattern).
Specifically, the researchers
found that Type 2 NASH was more than three times as common as
Type 1 NASH in children. Advanced liver scarring and cirrhosis
were seen only in children with Type 2 NASH. In addition, they
found that boys were more likely than girls to have Type 2 NASH
and less likely to have Type 1. Type 2 NASH was also more common
in children of non-white race or Hispanic ethnicity.
Schwimmer, director
of the Fatty Liver Clinic at Children’s Hospital in San
Diego, noted that “many obese children will already have
NAFLD without any symptoms. Our data suggest particular groups
of children at risk for advanced disease. We believe that the
different injury patterns in children suggests differences in
causation and potentially treatment and outcome. Additionally,
we speculate that Type 2 NASH may also occur in adults, and
this needs to be look for.”
Digestive Disease Week,
held May 15-20, is jointly sponsored by the American Association
for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD), the American Gastroenterological
Association (AGA), the American Society for Gastrointestinal
Endoscopy (ASGE) and the Society for Surgery of the Alimentary
Tract (SSAT).
Media Contacts: Sue
Pondrom (619) 543-6163
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