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Pediatr Obes ; 17(10): e12947, 2022 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35726748

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Diagnosis of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in children and adolescents currently requires advanced or invasive technologies. OBJECTIVES: We aimed to develop a method to improve diagnosis, using body composition indices and liver biochemical markers. METHODS: To diagnose non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, 767 Danish children and adolescents underwent clinical examination, blood sampling, whole-body dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry scanning and proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy for liver fat quantification. Fourteen variables were selected as a starting point to construct models, narrowed by stepwise selection. Individuals were split into a training set for model construction and a validation test set. The final models were applied to 2120 Danish children and adolescents to estimate the prevalence. RESULTS: The final models included five variables in different combinations: body mass index-standard deviation score, android-to-gynoid-fat ratio, android-regional fat percent, trunk-regional fat percent and alanine transaminase. When validated, the sensitivity and specificity ranged from 38.6% to 51.7% and 87.6% to 91.9%, respectively. The estimated prevalence was 24.2%-35.3%. Models including alanine transaminase alongside body composition measurements displayed higher sensitivity. CONCLUSIONS: Body composition indices and alanine transaminase can be used to estimate non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, with 38.6%-51.7% sensitivity and 87.6%-91.9%, specificity, in children and adolescents with overweight (including obesity). These estimated a 24.2%-35.3% prevalence in 2120 patients.


Subject(s)
Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease , Absorptiometry, Photon , Adolescent , Alanine Transaminase , Body Composition , Body Mass Index , Child , Humans , Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease/diagnosis , Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease/epidemiology , Obesity/diagnosis , Obesity/epidemiology
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