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Radiological Quantification of Sarcopenic Obesity and its Role in Chronic Liver Disease Severity.

Authors :
Cimsit, Canan
Kursun, Meltem
Demircioglu, Ozlem
Dilber, Feyza
Demirtas, Coskun Ozer
Ergenc, Ilkay
Source :
Academic Radiology; 2023 Supplement 1, Vol. 30, pS124-S131, 8p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

To define sarcopenic obesity (SaO) among chronic liver disease (CLD) patients via CT and MRI, and assess its impact on liver disease severity. CLD patients referred from the Gastroenterology and Hepatology Department diagnosed as chronic hepatitis B (N :101), cirrhosis (N :110), and hepatocellular carcinoma (N :169) with available information on body height, weight, Child-Pugh and MELD scores within 2 weeks of CT or MRI scanning were included in the study. Cross-sectional examinations were retrospectively evaluated for skeletal muscle index (SMI) and visceral adipose tissue area (VATA). The disease severity was assessed by Child-Pugh and MELD scoring. The rate of sarcopenia and SaO in the cirrhotic patients was higher than that in the chronic hepatitis B patients (p <0.033 and p < 0.004, respectively). The rate of sarcopenia and SaO in HCC patients was higher than that in the chronic hepatitis B patients (p <0.001 and p <0.001, respectively). Sarcopenic patients in Chronic hepatitis B, cirrhotic, and HCC groups had higher MELD scores than nonsarcopenic patients (p <0.035, p <0.023, and p <0.024, respectively). Despite finding a similar increase in Child-Pugh scores in cirrhotic and HCC sarcopenic patients, results were statistically insignificant (p <0.597 and p <0.688). HCC patients with SaO had higher MELD scores than patients with other body composition catagories (p <0.006). Cirrhotic patients with SaO had higher MELD scores than nonsarcopenic obese patients (p <0.049). Chronic hepatitis B patients with obesity had low MELD scores (p <0.035). Cirrhotic and HCC patients with obesity had higher MELD scores (p <0.01 and p <0.024, respectively). Cirrhotic and HCC patients with obesity had higher Child-Pugh scores than nonobese patients but only HCC patients showed statistically significance (p <0.480 and p <0.001). Radiologic evaluation of SaO and harmonizing body composition with MELD scoring is critical in CLD management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10766332
Volume :
30
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Academic Radiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
171881422
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acra.2023.03.001