Gibson Philippa S, Lang Sarah, Dhawan Anil, Fitzpatrick Emer, Blumfield Michelle L, Truby Helen, Hart Kathryn H, Moore J Bernadette
*Department of Nutritional Sciences, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Surrey, Guildford, UK †Department of Nutrition and Dietetics, School of Clinical Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia ‡Paediatric Liver Centre, King's College London School of Medicine at King's College Hospital, London §School of Food Science and Nutrition, University of Leeds, Leeds, West Yorkshire, UK.
J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr. 2017 Aug;65(2):141-149. doi: 10.1097/MPG.0000000000001624.
The aim of the study was to evaluate efficacy of nutrition and physical activity interventions in the clinical management of paediatric nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. The prevalence of paediatric nonalcoholic fatty liver disease continues to rise alongside childhood obesity. Weight loss through lifestyle modification is currently first-line treatment, although supplementation of specific dietary components may be beneficial.
Medline, CINAHL, EMBASE, Scopus, and Cochrane Libraries were systematically searched to identify randomized controlled trials assessing nutritional and physical activity interventions. Primary outcome measures were changes to liver biomarkers assessed by imaging, histology, or serum liver function tests. Study quality was evaluated using the American Dietetic Association Quality Criteria Checklist.
Fifteen articles met eligibility criteria investigating nutritional supplementation (vitamin E [n = 6], probiotics [n = 2], omega-3 fatty acids [n = 5]), dietary modification (low glycaemic load [n = 1] and reducing fructose intake [n = 1]). No randomized controlled trials examining physical activity interventions were identified. Vitamin E was ineffective at improving alanine transaminase levels, whereas omega-3 fatty acids decreased hepatic fat content. Probiotics gave mixed results, whereas reduced fructose consumption did not improve primary outcome measures. A low glycaemic load diet and a low-fat diet appeared equally effective in decreasing hepatic fat content and transaminases. Most studies were deemed neutral as assessed by the American Dietetic Association Quality Criteria Checklist.
The limited evidence base inhibits the prescription of specific dietary and/or lifestyle strategies for clinical practice. General healthy eating and physical activity guidelines, promoting weight loss, should remain first-line treatment until high-quality evidence emerges that support specific interventions that offer additional clinical benefit.
本研究旨在评估营养和体育活动干预措施在小儿非酒精性脂肪性肝病临床管理中的疗效。小儿非酒精性脂肪性肝病的患病率随着儿童肥胖率的上升而持续增加。通过生活方式改变来减轻体重是目前的一线治疗方法,尽管补充特定的饮食成分可能有益。
系统检索了医学文献数据库(Medline)、护理学与健康领域数据库(CINAHL)、荷兰医学文摘数据库(EMBASE)、Scopus数据库和考科蓝图书馆,以确定评估营养和体育活动干预措施的随机对照试验。主要结局指标是通过影像学、组织学或血清肝功能检查评估的肝脏生物标志物的变化。使用美国饮食协会质量标准清单评估研究质量。
15篇文章符合纳入标准,这些文章研究了营养补充剂(维生素E[n = 6]、益生菌[n = 2]、ω-3脂肪酸[n = 5])、饮食调整(低血糖负荷[n = 1]和减少果糖摄入[n = 1])。未发现研究体育活动干预措施的随机对照试验。维生素E对改善丙氨酸转氨酶水平无效,而ω-3脂肪酸可降低肝脏脂肪含量。益生菌的结果不一,而减少果糖摄入并未改善主要结局指标。低血糖负荷饮食和低脂饮食在降低肝脏脂肪含量和转氨酶方面似乎同样有效。根据美国饮食协会质量标准清单评估,大多数研究被认为质量中等。
证据有限,阻碍了在临床实践中采用特定饮食和/或生活方式策略。在出现支持能带来额外临床益处的特定干预措施的高质量证据之前,推广减肥的一般健康饮食和体育活动指南应仍然是一线治疗方法。