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©The Author(s) 2021.
World J Gastroenterol. Jun 14, 2021; 27(22): 3064-3072
Published online Jun 14, 2021. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v27.i22.3064
Published online Jun 14, 2021. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v27.i22.3064
Ref. | Study design | Population | NAFLD | Main findings |
Mahamid et al[34] | Retrospective case-control study, SZMC, Jerusalem | 71 hospitalized patients with COVID-19 infection, both genders, age ≥ 18.0 yr (mean age 51.0 ± 21.7), 22 NAFLD, 49 non-NAFLD | CT within hospitalization or recently made | Significant association between NAFLD and severity of COVID-19 even after adjustments for obesity, hypertension, metabolic syndrome, diabetes, and smoking. This association was independent of metabolic syndrome and/or its components. NAFLD patients have an increased risk of severe COVID-19 in both genders, in particular in males (Male: P = 0.001 Female: P = 0.002) |
Ji et al[28] | Retrospective case-control study. Patients of two COVID Hospital in China | 202 patients with COVID-19 (hospitalized and follow-up within 12 mo of the diagnosis). Median age 44.5 (34.8-54.1), 163 patients with stable disease (37.6% of patients with NAFLD), 39 patients with progressive disease (25.8% of patients with NAFLD) | NAFLD defined as hepatic steatosis index: 8 × (ALT/AST) + BMI (+ 2 if type 2 diabetes, + 2 if female) > 36 and/or US | Male patients aged > 60 yr, with higher BMI, underlying comorbidities, and NAFLD were associated with COVID-19 progression. Patients with NAFLD had higher risk of disease progression, longer viral shedding times, and higher likelihood of abnormal liver function from admission to discharge than patients without NAFLD |
Zhou et al[31] | Cohort study, Asian ethnicity | 55 MAFLD patients with COVID-19 were 1:1 matched by age (± 5 yr), sex, and BMI (± 1 unit) to COVID-19 patients without MAFLD. Age < 60 yr | CT | The presence of MAFLD was associated with severity of COVID-19 even after full adjustment (age, sex, smoking status, obesity, diabetes, hypertension) and a trend to increased duration of hospitalization. MAFLD patients had higher levels of CRP, ALT, AST, GGT, fasting blood glucose, and triglycerides |
Medeiros et al[27] | Retrospective case-control study. Radiology Departments of Hospital Beneficiencia Portuguesa, San Paolo- Brasil | 316 patients clinically suspected of having COVID-19 infection: -n.204: RT-PCR positive; -n.112: RT-PCR and chest CT negative pattern. Age > 18 yr | CT: Attenuation value of ≤ 40 HU, measured in the region of interest (commonly in the right hepatic lobe) in non-enhanced phase | Higher prevalence of steatosis in affected patients, even after adjustments for sex and age |
Forlano et al[29] | Retrospective cohort study. Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust (London, United Kingdom) | 193 hospitalized, adult patients with COVID-19 infection and CT imaging, NAFLD: 61 (31%); Non-NAFLD: 132 (66%), excluded: 5 (3%) | US or CT dated within 1 yr from the admission for COVID-19 or a known diagnosis of NAFLD. FIB-4 index for fibrosis | No difference in terms of admission to ICU and in mortality between NAFLD and non-NAFLD patients. NAFLD patients were significantly younger at presentation |
Gao et al[30] | Cohort study. Four hospitals in China | 130 nondiabetic patients with COVID-19: 65 MAFLD and 65 controls were 1:1 matched by age (± 5 yr) and sex | CT | MAFLD presence in nondiabetic patients was associated with a 4-fold increased risk of severe COVID-19, even after adjusting for age, sex, and coexisting comorbidities. The risk of severe COVID-19 increased with increasing numbers of metabolic risk factors |
Targher et al[33] | Retrospective cohort study. Four hospitals in China | 310 hospitalized, adult patients with COVID-19 infection | CT: FIB-4 index and NFS used to categorize liver fibrosis in low, intermediate, or high | In patients with MAFLD the presence of intermediate or high fibrosis (FIB-4 or NFS) was associated with a higher risk of severe COVID-19, even after adjusting for sex, obesity, and diabetes |
Sharma et al[32] | Review | Adult patients | CT/FIB-4 index and NFS | Patients with MAFLD had higher risk of disease progression, longer viral shedding times, higher likelihood of abnormal liver function, and 4-6-fold increased risk of severe disease than patients with no MAFLD. Younger patients (age < 60 yr) were also at greater risk for increased severity of COVID-19 |
Ref. | Study design | Population | NAFLD | Main findings |
Qiu et al[36] | Cohort study. Three hospitals in Zhejiang Province, China | 36 pediatric patients (aged 0-16 yr) with laboratory confirmed COVID-19 infection; mild cases (n = 17); moderate cases (n = 19) compared with adults with COVID-19 (n = 175); Children with SARS (n = 44); Children with H1N1 influenza (n = 167) | Increased liver enzymes | Elevated ALT in two patients (mild cases) and AST in three patients (two mild and one moderate case), 6% of cases with elevated liver enzymes, 18% of cases with elevated liver enzymes, 48% of cases with elevated liver enzymes, 17% of cases with elevated liver enzymes |
Sun et al[37] | Retrospective analysis. Intensive Care Unit, Wuhan Children’s Hospital | 8 severe or critically ill COVID-19 patients admitted to the ICU. Age: 2 mo-15 yr | Increased liver enzymes | Elevated ALT levels in 4 out of 8 patients. Total bilirubin level in all patients was normal |
Wang et al[39] | Retrospective study. Children from six provinces (autonomous region) in northern China. | 31 cases of COVID-19. Age: 6 mo-17 yr | Increased liver enzymes | Elevation of liver enzyme (22%) |
Xia et al[38] | Retrospective study. Wuhan Children’s Hospital | 20 COVID-19 pediatric patients. Age: 1 d-14 yr, 7 mo (median age: 2 yr and 1.5 mo) | No NAFLD screening. CT was performed for pneumonia | Elevated ALT (> 40 U/L) in 25% of cases |
Jiehao et al[40] | Case series. Children’s Hospital in Shanghai, Hainan, Hefei in Anhui province, and Qingdao in Shandong province | 10 patients aged 3-131 mo (mean: 74 mo). Male: female 1:1.5 | No NAFLD screening. CT was performed for pneumonia | Median ALT: 18.5 U/L, AST: 27.7 U/L. One patient had ALT: 100 U/L and AST: 142 U/L |
Tan et al[41] | Retrospective study. North Hospital of Changsha First Hospital | 10 children with confirmed COVID-19 infection. Mean age of 7 yr (1-12 yr) | Increased liver enzymes | Elevated AST in two patients |
- Citation: Di Sessa A, Lanzaro F, Zarrilli S, Picone V, Guarino S, Miraglia del Giudice E, Marzuillo P. COVID-19 and pediatric fatty liver disease: Is there interplay? World J Gastroenterol 2021; 27(22): 3064-3072
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1007-9327/full/v27/i22/3064.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.3748/wjg.v27.i22.3064