Research Article Details

Article ID: A45595
PMID: 26201792
Source: Hepatol Int
Title: The Fatty Liver Index has limited utility for the detection and quantification of hepatic steatosis in obese patients.
Abstract: PURPOSE: Noninvasive tools for the detection of hepatic steatosis are needed. The Fatty Liver Index (FLI), which includes body mass index (BMI), waist circumference, triglycerides, and &#947;-glutamyl-transferase, has been proposed as a screening tool for fatty liver. Our objective was to validate the FLI for the detection and quantification of hepatic steatosis in an obese population. METHODS: Patients with chronic liver disease and BMI&#160;&#8805;&#160;28&#160;kg/m(2) underwent liver biopsy and FLI determination. FLI performance for diagnosing steatosis compared with biopsy was assessed using areas under receiver operating characteristic curves (AUROCs), and a novel model for the prediction of significant steatosis (&#8805;5&#160;%) was derived. RESULTS: Among 250 included patients, 65&#160;% were male, and the median BMI was 33&#160;kg/m(2); 48&#160;% had nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, and 77&#160;% had significant (&#8805;5&#160;%) steatosis. The FLI was weakly correlated with the percentage (&#961;&#160;=&#160;0.25, p&#160;=&#160;0.0001) and grade of steatosis (&#961;&#160;=&#160;0.28, p&#160;<&#160;0.00005). The median FLI was higher among patients with significant steatosis (91 vs. 80 with <5&#160;% steatosis; p&#160;=&#160;0.0001) and the AUROC for this outcome was 0.67 (95&#160;% CI 0.59-0.76). At an optimal FLI cut-off of 79, the FLI was 81&#160;% sensitive and 49&#160;% specific, and had positive and negative predictive values of 84 and 43&#160;%, respectively. A novel index including triglycerides, glucose, alkaline phosphatase, and BMI outperformed the FLI for predicting significant steatosis [AUROCs 0.78 vs. 0.68; p&#160;=&#160;0.009 (n&#160;=&#160;247)]. CONCLUSIONS: In obese patients, the FLI is a poor predictor of significant steatosis and has limited utility for steatosis quantification compared with liver histology. A novel index including triglycerides, glucose, alkaline phosphatase, and BMI may be useful, but requires validation.
DOI: 10.1007/s12072-012-9401-4