Frontiers in Endocrinology (Jun 2020)

Serum Ferritin Correlates With Liver Fat in Male Adolescents With Obesity

  • Katharina Mörwald,
  • Elmar Aigner,
  • Elmar Aigner,
  • Peter Bergsten,
  • Susanne M. Brunner,
  • Susanne M. Brunner,
  • Susanne M. Brunner,
  • Anders Forslund,
  • Joel Kullberg,
  • Hakan Ahlström,
  • Hannes Manell,
  • Kirsten Roomp,
  • Sebastian Schütz,
  • Sebastian Schütz,
  • Fanni Zsoldos,
  • Wilfried Renner,
  • Dieter Furthner,
  • Dieter Furthner,
  • Katharina Maruszczak,
  • Katharina Maruszczak,
  • Stephan Zandanell,
  • Stephan Zandanell,
  • Daniel Weghuber,
  • Daniel Weghuber,
  • Harald Mangge

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2020.00340
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) contributes essentially to the burden of obesity and can start in childhood. NAFLD can progress to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. The early phase of NAFLD is crucial because during this time the disease is fully reversible. Pediatric NAFLD shows unique features of histology and pathophysiology compared to adults. Changes in serum iron parameters are common in adult NAFLD and have been termed dysmetabolic iron overload syndrome characterized by increased serum ferritin levels and normal transferrin saturation; however, the associations of serum ferritin, inflammation, and liver fat content have been incompletely investigated in children. As magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is an excellent measure for the degree of liver steatosis, we applied this method herein to clarify the interaction between ferritin and fatty liver in male adolescents. For this study, one hundred fifty male pediatric patients with obesity and who are overweight were included. We studied a subgroup of male patients with (n = 44) and without (n = 18) NAFLD in whom we determined liver fat content, visceral adipose tissue, and subcutaneous adipose tissue extent with a 1.5T MRI (Philips NL). All patients underwent a standardized oral glucose tolerance test. We measured uric acid, triglycerides, HDL-, LDL-, total cholesterol, liver transaminases, high sensitive CRP (hsCRP), interleukin-6, HbA1c, and insulin. In univariate analysis, ferritin was associated with MRI liver fat, visceral adipose tissue content, hsCRP, AST, ALT, and GGT, while transferrin and soluble transferrin receptor were not associated with ferritin. Multivariate analysis identified hsCRP and liver fat content as independent predictors of serum ferritin in the pediatric male patients. Our data indicate that serum ferritin in male adolescents with obesity is mainly determined by liver fat content and inflammation but not by body iron status.

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