Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Henry Ford Health System, 3E One Ford Place, Detroit, MI, 48202, USA.
Department of Public Health Sciences, Henry Ford Health System, Detroit, MI, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2021 Dec;8(6):1533-1538. doi: 10.1007/s40615-020-00916-2. Epub 2020 Nov 23.
Normal ranges of serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) may vary by race. However, results from research studies are contradictory, and many of these studies have included only small numbers of African Americans. We investigated ALT values in patients without evidence of liver disease to determine whether normal ranges differ across race groups. We also evaluated whether a race- and sex-dependent upper limit of normal (ULN) would improve the ability of ALT to predict liver disease compared to the sex-dependent ULN currently in use.
We identified ICD9 codes for liver conditions and diabetes in medical records from a sample of 6719 patients. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to assess differences in ALT log-transformed distributions by race. Logistic regression was used to evaluate whether the addition of race to the current sex-dependent ULN improves the ability of ALT to predict liver disease (assessed by area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC)).
Among 1200 patients with BMI 18.5 < 25 and no evidence of liver disease or type 2 diabetes in their medical record, African Americans demonstrated significantly lower ALT (23.47 IU/L; 95% CL 22.87-24.10) than a combined group of Asian American/White/Other patients (25.71 IU/L; 95% CL 24.69-26.77). This difference remained across BMI categories. The race- and sex-dependent model demonstrated significantly better predictive ability than the sex-dependent model (AUROC = 66.6% versus 59.6%, respectively; p < 0.0001).
In a large, racially diverse sample, African Americans demonstrated significantly lower ALT compared to non-African Americans; this difference remained as BMI increased. The establishment of race-specific normal ranges for ALT could contribute to better screening and care for African American patients.
血清丙氨酸氨基转移酶(ALT)的正常范围可能因种族而异。然而,研究结果存在矛盾,而且许多此类研究仅包括少数非裔美国人。我们调查了无肝脏疾病证据的患者的 ALT 值,以确定正常范围是否因种族群体而异。我们还评估了种族和性别依赖的正常上限(ULN)是否比目前使用的性别依赖 ULN 更能提高 ALT 预测肝脏疾病的能力。
我们从 6719 例患者的病历中确定了肝脏疾病和糖尿病的 ICD9 编码。使用方差分析(ANOVA)评估种族对 ALT 对数转换分布的差异。使用逻辑回归评估种族与当前性别依赖 ULN 一起是否可以提高 ALT 预测肝脏疾病的能力(通过接受者操作特征曲线下面积(AUROC)评估)。
在 1200 例 BMI 为 18.5<25 且病历中无肝脏疾病或 2 型糖尿病的患者中,非裔美国人的 ALT 明显低于亚裔/白种人/其他患者(23.47 IU/L;95%CL 22.87-24.10)(25.71 IU/L;95%CL 24.69-26.77)。这种差异在所有 BMI 类别中均存在。种族和性别依赖模型的预测能力明显优于性别依赖模型(AUROC 分别为 66.6%和 59.6%;p<0.0001)。
在一个种族多样化的大型样本中,非裔美国人的 ALT 明显低于非非裔美国人;随着 BMI 的增加,这种差异仍然存在。为 ALT 建立特定种族的正常范围可能有助于改善对非裔美国患者的筛查和护理。