Scientific Reports (Jul 2024)

Rapid improvement of hepatic steatosis and liver stiffness after metabolic/bariatric surgery: a prospective study

  • Larissa Nixdorf,
  • Lukas Hartl,
  • Stefanie Ströhl,
  • Daniel Moritz Felsenreich,
  • Magdalena Mairinger,
  • Julia Jedamzik,
  • Paula Richwien,
  • Behrang Mozayani,
  • Georg Semmler,
  • Lorenz Balcar,
  • Michael Schwarz,
  • Mathias Jachs,
  • Nina Dominik,
  • Christoph Bichler,
  • Michael Trauner,
  • Mattias Mandorfer,
  • Thomas Reiberger,
  • Felix B. Langer,
  • David Josef Maria Bauer,
  • Gerhard Prager

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-67415-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) and related steatohepatitis (MASH) are common among obese patients and may improve after metabolic/bariatric surgery (MBS). 93 Patients undergoing MBS in 2021–2022 were prospectively enrolled. Liver stiffness measurement (LSM; via vibration-controlled transient elastography [VCTE], point [pSWE] and 2D [2DSWE] shear wave elastography) and non-invasive steatosis assessment (via controlled attenuation parameter [CAP]) were performed before (baseline [BL]) and three months (M3) after surgery. 93 patients (median age 40.9 years, 68.8% female, median BL-BMI: 46.0 kg/m2) were included. BL-liver biopsy showed MASLD in 82.8% and MASH in 34.4% of patients. At M3 the median relative total weight loss (%TWL) was 20.1% and the median BMI was 36.1 kg/m2. LSM assessed by VCTE and 2DSWE, as well as median CAP all decreased significantly from BL to M3 both in the overall cohort and among patients with MASH. There was a decrease from BL to M3 in median levels of ALT (34.0 U/L to 31 U/L; p = 0.025), gamma glutamyl transferase (BL: 30.0 to 21.0 U/L; p < 0.001) and MASLD fibrosis score (BL: − 0.97 to − 1.74; p < 0.001). Decreasing LSM and CAP, as well as liver injury markers suggest an improvement of MASLD/MASH as early as 3 months after MBS.

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