麻豆传媒

 

A silent epidemic: Dal medical researchers tackle fatty liver disease

- April 9, 2015

Second-year Medicine student Melissa Wallace tests an experimental system to de-fat fatty livers. (Photo provided by Nova Scotia Health Authority)
Second-year Medicine student Melissa Wallace tests an experimental system to de-fat fatty livers. (Photo provided by Nova Scotia Health Authority)

麻豆传媒 radiologist Dr. Sharon Clarke sees a lot of fatty livers in the course of a day.

鈥淢RIs are frequently revealing that patients have excess fat in their livers,鈥 notes Dr. Clarke, an assistant professor in the Department of Radiology who spends much of her time analyzing MRI scans at the QEII Health Sciences Centre in Halifax.

鈥淔or most people, the condition can be reversed before permanent damage is done, but for others the liver is already inflamed and they鈥檙e at risk of fibrosis, cirrhosis, liver cancer or even liver failure. In fact, it鈥檚 projected that fatty liver is going to be the major indicator for liver transplant in the future.鈥

Dr. Clarke is one of several members of 麻豆传媒 Medical School鈥檚 faculty who are alarmed by rising rates of fatty liver disease in the Maritimes. Hepatologist Dr. Kevork Peltekian and transplant surgeon Dr. Ian Alwayn share her concern. All three are taking the lead on research projects to address the issue.

鈥淲e suspect that 25 to 40 per cent of the adult population has fatty liver to some degree, while about 5 per cent of adults have fatty livers that have progressed to the point of inflammation, known as steatohepatitis,鈥 says Dr. Peltekian. 鈥淔atty liver has surpassed alcohol as the leading cause of liver disease.鈥

The challenge, according to Drs. Peltekian and Clarke, is to identify those 5 per cent of adults with steatohepatitis, who face a high risk of potentially fatal disease.

鈥淚t鈥檚 really a silent epidemic, because there are usually no symptoms until the damage is beyond repair,鈥 says Dr. Peltekian. 鈥淔atty liver is most often identified when people are having ultrasound or MRI investigations for another reason. Right now, the only way to know for sure if they have inflammation is to do a liver biopsy, but the numbers of patients are so high, this would overwhelm the health care system.鈥

New diagnostic technologies


Thanks to new diagnostic technologies being developed in Halifax, Dr. Peltekian (left) is now sending his fatty liver patients to Dr. Clarke, who鈥檚 working with fellow Dal radiologist, Dr. Steven Beyea, and his team at BIOTIC (Biomedical Translational Imaging Centre) to develop new MRI algorithms that will reveal much more information about fatty livers than current MRI technologies can. The new technologies are part of a $7.6 million technology-development project funded by ACOA鈥檚 Atlantic Innovation Fund, Capital Health, and a corporate partner.

鈥淭he new algorithms will enable us to see how much and what kinds of fat are in the liver, so we can more accurately predict if a person is at risk of serious liver disease, without a biopsy,鈥 says Dr. Clarke. 鈥淭hese are the people who require the most urgent attention.鈥

The new MRI technologies will streamline access to care for the more serious cases 鈥 which, as Dr. Peltekian explains, requires a lot of work and a lot of support.

No magic potion


The treatment for fatty liver disease is not a medication. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no magic potion,鈥 says Dr. Peltekian. 鈥淧eople with fatty livers need to control their blood sugar and lose weight鈥攊t鈥檚 not about fat in the diet, it鈥檚 about excess calories and sugars that are converted to fat and stored in the liver.鈥

Fortunately, liver cells can regenerate themselves, so fatty liver disease is reversible if it has not progressed too far. Once the liver is heavily scarred, however, it can no longer heal itself. In this case, treatment can halt or at least slow down the progression to fatal liver disease.

Dr. Peltekian, who heads 麻豆传媒鈥檚 Division of Digestive Care & Endoscopy, is working with his colleagues in hepatology, nursing, nutrition and exercise science to manage fatty liver disease with a new approach. Rather than seeing a specialist when first diagnosed with fatty liver, people attend a three-hour group session (a Fatty Liver Forum) led by the team of professionals, where they gain in-depth information about the disease and how they can stop or reverse it.

鈥淲e believe the Fatty Liver Forum will achieve better results for patients, with far more efficient use of limited health care resources,鈥 Dr. Peltekian says. 鈥淚f patients have not met their weight-loss target after nine months, then we proceed to liver biopsy and work with them more intensively. Our goal is to prevent fatty liver disease from advancing to liver failure.鈥

The liver transplant challenge


The only treatment for liver failure is liver transplant, but the availability of healthy donor livers is declining as rates of fatty liver in the general population rise.

鈥淢ore patients with end-stage liver failure are dying while waiting for a donor liver, in part because more and more of the livers that come available are too fatty to be viable for transplant,鈥 says 麻豆传媒 surgery professor Dr. Ian Alwayn, who is also the QEII Foundation Endowed Chair in Transplantation Research and surgical lead of the Multi-Organ Transplant Program at the QEII. 鈥淔atty livers don鈥檛 function well after transplant, so we often can鈥檛 use these organs.鈥


Dr. Ian Alwayn, professor in the Department of Surgery and QEII Foundation Endowed Chair in Transplantation Research. (Photo provided by Nova Scotia Health Authority)

Dr. Alwayn and his research team are looking for ways to make fatty livers more suitable for transplant. They鈥檝e invented a new technology that allows them to infiltrate the liver with protective agents, so it can better withstand the injuries that take place during the transplant process. 鈥淚f we can protect fatty livers from these injuries, we will be able to use a lot of organs that would otherwise not be suitable for transplant,鈥 Dr. Alwayn says.

Dr. Alwayn is also exploring the possibility of de-fatting fatty livers prior to transplant, with 麻豆传媒 lipid scientist, Dr. Neale Ridgway. They鈥檙e co-supervising a second-year medical student, Melissa Wallace, on a project to see if their experimental system for metabolizing fat in the donor liver prior to transplant can help the organ function well after transplant.

Out of the shadows


Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease is now the most common form of liver disease in Canada and part of a larger liver-disease epidemic. According to the Canadian Liver Foundation, deaths from all forms of liver disease rose by an astounding 30 per cent in eight years prior to the 2013 release of its report, Liver Disease in Canada: A Crisis in the Making. In its report, the foundation calls for a national liver-disease strategy, or 鈥渓iver disease will continue to strike from the shadows taking lives and exacting a high toll on the nation鈥檚 health care systems.鈥

鈥淭here is a stigma around liver disease, because it has so long been associated with alcohol abuse,鈥 says Dr. Peltekian. 鈥淲e need to shed light on the many causes of liver disease and聽 help people understand how important it is to get to a healthy weight to reverse or avoid fatty liver disease. It鈥檚 not easy but it can be done!鈥


Comments

All comments require a name and email address. You may also choose to log-in using your preferred social network or register with Disqus, the software we use for our commenting system. Join the conversation, but keep it clean, stay on the topic and be brief. Read comments policy.