Mediterranean-Oriented Dietary Intervention Is Effective to Reduce Liver Steatosis in Patients with Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease: Results from an Italian Clinical Trial

IF 2.2 4区 医学 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL International Journal of Clinical Practice Pub Date : 2024-01-25 DOI:10.1155/2024/8861126
Barbara Zanini, Federica Benini, Monica Marullo, Anna Simonetto, Angelo Rossi, Paola Cavagnoli, Alessia Bonalumi, Silvia Marconi, Marie Graciella Pigozzi, Gianni Gilioli, Alessandra Valerio, Francesco Donato, Maurizio Castellano, Chiara Ricci
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Abstract

Background of the Study. Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the most common liver disease in western countries. Lifestyle interventions are recommended as the primary therapy for NAFLD. Methodology. In this clinical trial, NAFLD patients were enrolled in a 12-month dietary intervention aimed to improve their eating habits according to the Mediterranean pattern, with scheduled appointments every three months. After the exclusion of steatosis, healthy subjects were recruited and received general advice based on current Italian food-based dietary guidelines. Results. One hundred and fifty five subjects aged 20–59 years underwent (i) liver ultrasound (US), (ii) clinical and anthropometric evaluations, (iii) blood tests, and (iv) assessment of dietary habits. According to US evaluation, 73 of them had severe, moderate, or mild liver steatosis (NAFLD patients) and 82 had no liver steatosis (healthy controls). Fifty-eight NAFLD patients and 73 controls completed the study. Among NAFLD patients, 26 (45%) downgraded steatosis severity, 12 of which achieved complete steatosis regression (21%). Three of the healthy controls developed NAFLD. The NAFLD patients improved their dietary habits and reduced BMI and waist circumference, during the study period, more than healthy controls. Liver steatosis remission/regression was independent of changes in BMI or liver enzymes and was more frequent among patients with mild steatosis at baseline. Conclusions. Mediterranean dietary advices, without a personalised meal planning, were efficient in reducing/remitting NAFLD, especially among patients with mild disease, which argues in favour of early identification and lifestyle intervention. This trial is registered with NCT03300661.

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地中海式膳食干预能有效减轻非酒精性脂肪肝患者的肝脏脂肪变性:一项意大利临床试验的结果
研究背景。非酒精性脂肪肝(NAFLD)是西方国家最常见的肝病。建议将生活方式干预作为治疗非酒精性脂肪肝的主要方法。研究方法在这项临床试验中,非酒精性脂肪肝患者参加了为期 12 个月的饮食干预,旨在按照地中海模式改善饮食习惯,每三个月预约一次。在排除脂肪肝后,招募健康受试者,并根据意大利现行的以食物为基础的饮食指南向他们提供一般性建议。结果155 名 20-59 岁的受试者接受了(i) 肝脏超声波检查 (US)、(ii) 临床和人体测量评估、(iii) 血液检查和 (iv) 饮食习惯评估。根据 US 评估,其中 73 人患有重度、中度或轻度肝脏脂肪变性(非酒精性脂肪肝患者),82 人无肝脏脂肪变性(健康对照组)。58名非酒精性脂肪肝患者和73名对照组完成了研究。在非酒精性脂肪肝患者中,26 人(45%)的脂肪变性严重程度有所减轻,其中 12 人(21%)的脂肪变性完全消退。健康对照组中有三人患上了非酒精性脂肪肝。与健康对照组相比,非酒精性脂肪肝患者在研究期间改善了饮食习惯,降低了体重指数和腰围。肝脏脂肪变性的缓解/消退与体重指数或肝酶的变化无关,而且在基线脂肪变性程度较轻的患者中更为常见。结论是地中海饮食建议(不包括个性化膳食计划)可有效减少/缓解非酒精性脂肪肝,尤其是轻度患者,这支持早期识别和生活方式干预。该试验已在 NCT03300661 上注册。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
274
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: IJCP is a general medical journal. IJCP gives special priority to work that has international appeal. IJCP publishes: Editorials. IJCP Editorials are commissioned. [Peer reviewed at the editor''s discretion] Perspectives. Most IJCP Perspectives are commissioned. Example. [Peer reviewed at the editor''s discretion] Study design and interpretation. Example. [Always peer reviewed] Original data from clinical investigations. In particular: Primary research papers from RCTs, observational studies, epidemiological studies; pre-specified sub-analyses; pooled analyses. [Always peer reviewed] Meta-analyses. [Always peer reviewed] Systematic reviews. From October 2009, special priority will be given to systematic reviews. [Always peer reviewed] Non-systematic/narrative reviews. From October 2009, reviews that are not systematic will be considered only if they include a discrete Methods section that must explicitly describe the authors'' approach. Special priority will, however, be given to systematic reviews. [Always peer reviewed] ''How to…'' papers. Example. [Always peer reviewed] Consensus statements. [Always peer reviewed] Short reports. [Always peer reviewed] Letters. [Peer reviewed at the editor''s discretion] International scope IJCP publishes work from investigators globally. Around 30% of IJCP articles list an author from the UK. Around 30% of IJCP articles list an author from the USA or Canada. Around 45% of IJCP articles list an author from a European country that is not the UK. Around 15% of articles published in IJCP list an author from a country in the Asia-Pacific region.
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