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. 2016 Nov 21;22(43):9488–9505. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v22.i43.9488

Table 2.

Principal prospective studies of cardiovascular diseases mortality and morbidity risk in patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (published in the past 10 years)

Ref. Study design Study size Diagnosis of NAFLD Follow-up duration (yr) Adjusted clinical variables Major findings
Targher et al[17] Prospective; Hospital-based 2013 Ultrasound 6.5 Gender, age, BMI, smoking status, diabetes duration, alcohol consumption, BP, HbA1c, TG, HDL, LDL cholesterol, GGT, use of medications (anti-hyperglycemic, antihypertensive, lipid-lowering, or anti-platelet drugs), and metabolic syndrome NAFLD was independently associated with increased risk of nonfatal CVD events and CVD mortality
Hamaguch et al[18] Prospective; Community-based 1637 Ultrasound 5.0 Gender, age, BMI, smoking, alcohol consumption, BP, TG, HDL, LDL cholesterol, MetS NAFLD was independently associated with increased risk of nonfatal CVD events
Haring et al[19] Prospective; Community-based 4160 Ultrasound 7.3 Gender, age, WC, diabetes, alcohol consumption, BP, physical activity, education level, civil status, equalized income, and Functional Co-morbidity Index NAFLD was independently associated with increased risk of all-cause and CVD mortality in men
Wong et al[24] Prospective; Hospital-based 612 Ultrasound 1.8 Gender, age, BMI, WC, smoking status, diabetes, alcohol consumption, BP, fasting glucose, ALT, TG, HDL, LDL cholesterol, creatinine NAFLD was independently associated with an increased prevalence of CVD at baseline, but there was no significant association between NAFLD and risk of incident CVD events
Lazo et al[28] Prospective; Population-based 11371 Ultrasound 14.3 Gender, age, ethnicity, BMI, education, smoking status, BP, alcohol consumption, physical activity, hypercholesterolemia diabetes Independent increased risk of CVD but no significant association between NAFLD and all-cause and cause-specific (CVD, cancer and liver) mortality
Stepanova et al[22]
Zhou et al[20] Prospective; Community-based 3324 Ultrasound 4.0 No adjustment made Patients with NAFLD had about 3-fold higher rates of all-cause and CVD mortality than those without NAFLD
Treeprasertsuk et al[25] Prospective; Community-based 309 Ultrasound/CT 11.5 Gender, age Framingham risk score accurately predicted the higher 10-yr CAD risk in NAFLD patients and was the only variable significantly associated with the risk of developing new onset CVD events
Kim et al[23] Prospective; Population-based 11154 Ultrasound and advanced fibrosis score systems 14.5 Gender, age, ethnicity, education, income, diabetes, BP, history of CVD, lipid-lowering medication, smoking status, WC, alcohol consumption, caffeine consumption, total and HDL cholesterol, transferrin saturation, and CRP NAFLD was not associated with increased all-cause mortality. However, NAFLD with advanced hepatic fibrosis was independently associated with increased risk of all-cause mortality. Increase in mortality was almost entirely from CVD causes

NAFLD: Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease; BMI: Body mass index; BP: Blood pressure; TG: Triglycerides; GGT: Gamma-glutamyl transferase; MetS: Metabolic syndrome; WC: Waist circumference; ALT: Alanine aminotransferase; CRP: C-reactive protein; CVD: Cardiovascular diseases; NASH: Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis.