Research Article Details

Article ID: A12408
PMID: 30467685
Source: Hormones (Athens)
Title: Noggin levels in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease: the effect of vitamin E treatment.
Abstract: AIM: The evaluation of (a) noggin levels in patients with simple steatosis (SS) vs. nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) vs. controls, and (b) the effect of combined spironolactone plus vitamin E vs. vitamin E monotherapy on noggin levels in biopsy-proven patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). METHODS: In the case-control study, 15 patients with SS, 16 with NASH, and 24 controls were included. In the randomized controlled trial, NAFLD patients were assigned to vitamin E (400&#160;IU/d) or spironolactone (25&#160;mg/d) plus vitamin E for 52&#160;weeks. RESULTS: Noggin levels were lower in SS (5.8&#8201;&#177;&#8201;1.5&#160;pmol/l) and NASH (8.7&#8201;&#177;&#8201;2.4&#160;pmol/l) patients than in controls (13.7&#8201;&#177;&#8201;2.7&#160;pmol/l; p for trend&#8201;=&#8201;0.040), but were similar in SS and NASH patients. After adjustment for potential cofounders, log(noggin) remained different between groups. Log(noggin) levels similarly increased post-treatment in both groups: log(noggin) was not different between groups (p&#8201;=&#8201;0.20), but increased within groups over time (p&#8201;<&#8201;0.001), without a significant group &#215; time interaction (p&#8201;=&#8201;0.62). Log(noggin) significantly increased at month 2 post-treatment (p&#8201;=&#8201;0.008 vs. baseline) and remained stable thereafter. CONCLUSIONS: Lower noggin levels were observed in NAFLD patients than in controls. Noggin levels increased similarly by either combined low-dose spironolactone plus vitamin E or vitamin E monotherapy. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT01147523.
DOI: 10.1007/s42000-018-0083-8