Komolafe Oluyemi, Buzzetti Elena, Linden Audrey, Best Lawrence Mj, Madden Angela M, Roberts Danielle, Chase Thomas Jg, Fritche Dominic, Freeman Suzanne C, Cooper Nicola J, Sutton Alex J, Milne Elisabeth Jane, Wright Kathy, Pavlov Chavdar S, Davidson Brian R, Tsochatzis Emmanuel, Gurusamy Kurinchi Selvan
University College London, London, UK.
Sheila Sherlock Liver Centre, Royal Free Hospital and the UCL Institute of Liver and Digestive Health, London, UK.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2021 Jul 19;7(7):CD013157. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD013157.pub2.
The prevalence of non-alcohol-related fatty liver disease (NAFLD) varies between 19% and 33% in different populations. NAFLD decreases life expectancy and increases risks of liver cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma, and the requirement for liver transplantation. Uncertainty surrounds relative benefits and harms of various nutritional supplements in NAFLD. Currently no nutritional supplement is recommended for people with NAFLD.
• To assess the benefits and harms of different nutritional supplements for treatment of NAFLD through a network meta-analysis • To generate rankings of different nutritional supplements according to their safety and efficacy SEARCH METHODS: We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, MEDLINE, Embase, Science Citation Index Expanded, Conference Proceedings Citation Index-Science, the World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform, and trials registers until February 2021 to identify randomised clinical trials in people with NAFLD.
We included only randomised clinical trials (irrespective of language, blinding, or status) for people with NAFLD, irrespective of method of diagnosis, age and diabetic status of participants, or presence of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). We excluded randomised clinical trials in which participants had previously undergone liver transplantation.
We performed a network meta-analysis with OpenBUGS using Bayesian methods whenever possible and calculated differences in treatments using hazard ratios (HRs), odds ratios (ORs), and rate ratios with 95% credible intervals (CrIs) based on an available-case analysis, according to National Institute of Health and Care Excellence Decision Support Unit guidance.
We included in the review a total of 202 randomised clinical trials (14,200 participants). Nineteen trials were at low risk of bias. A total of 32 different interventions were compared in these trials. A total of 115 trials (7732 participants) were included in one or more comparisons. The remaining trials did not report any of the outcomes of interest for this review. Follow-up ranged from 1 month to 28 months. The follow-up period in trials that reported clinical outcomes was 2 months to 28 months. During this follow-up period, clinical events related to NAFLD such as mortality, liver cirrhosis, liver decompensation, liver transplantation, hepatocellular carcinoma, and liver-related mortality were sparse. We did not calculate effect estimates for mortality because of sparse data (zero events for at least one of the groups in the trial). None of the trials reported that they measured overall health-related quality of life using a validated scale. The evidence is very uncertain about effects of interventions on serious adverse events (number of people or number of events). We are very uncertain about effects on adverse events of most of the supplements that we investigated, as the evidence is of very low certainty. However, people taking PUFA (polyunsaturated fatty acid) may be more likely to experience an adverse event than those not receiving an active intervention (network meta-analysis results: OR 4.44, 95% CrI 2.40 to 8.48; low-certainty evidence; 4 trials, 203 participants; direct evidence: OR 4.43, 95% CrI 2.43 to 8.42). People who take other supplements (a category that includes nutritional supplements other than vitamins, fatty acids, phospholipids, and antioxidants) had higher numbers of adverse events than those not receiving an active intervention (network meta-analysis: rate ratio 1.73, 95% CrI 1.26 to 2.41; 6 trials, 291 participants; direct evidence: rate ratio 1.72, 95% CrI 1.25 to 2.40; low-certainty evidence). Data were sparse (zero events in all groups in the trial) for liver transplantation, liver decompensation, and hepatocellular carcinoma. So, we did not perform formal analysis for these outcomes. The evidence is very uncertain about effects of other antioxidants (antioxidants other than vitamins) compared to no active intervention on liver cirrhosis (HR 1.68, 95% CrI 0.23 to 15.10; 1 trial, 99 participants; very low-certainty evidence). The evidence is very uncertain about effects of interventions in any of the remaining comparisons, or data were sparse (with zero events in at least one of the groups), precluding formal calculations of effect estimates. Data were probably because of the very short follow-up period (2 months to 28 months). It takes follow-up of 8 to 28 years to detect differences in mortality between people with NAFLD and the general population. Therefore, it is unlikely that differences in clinical outcomes are noted in trials providing less than 5 to 10 years of follow-up.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The evidence indicates considerable uncertainty about effects of nutritional supplementation compared to no additional intervention on all clinical outcomes for people with non-alcohol-related fatty liver disease. Accordingly, high-quality randomised comparative clinical trials with adequate follow-up are needed. We propose registry-based randomised clinical trials or cohort multiple randomised clinical trials (study design in which multiple interventions are trialed within large longitudinal cohorts of patients to gain efficiencies and align trials more closely to standard clinical practice) comparing interventions such as vitamin E, prebiotics/probiotics/synbiotics, PUFAs, and no nutritional supplementation. The reason for the choice of interventions is the impact of these interventions on indirect outcomes, which may translate to clinical benefit. Outcomes in such trials should be mortality, health-related quality of life, decompensated liver cirrhosis, liver transplantation, and resource utilisation measures including costs of intervention and decreased healthcare utilisation after minimum follow-up of 8 years (to find meaningful differences in clinically important outcomes).
非酒精性脂肪性肝病(NAFLD)在不同人群中的患病率在19%至33%之间。NAFLD会缩短预期寿命,增加肝硬化、肝细胞癌以及肝移植需求的风险。各种营养补充剂在NAFLD中的相对益处和危害尚不确定。目前不建议NAFLD患者使用营养补充剂。
• 通过网状Meta分析评估不同营养补充剂治疗NAFLD的益处和危害 • 根据安全性和有效性对不同营养补充剂进行排名
我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库、MEDLINE、Embase、科学引文索引扩展版、会议论文引文索引 - 科学版、世界卫生组织国际临床试验注册平台以及截至2021年2月的试验注册库,以识别NAFLD患者的随机临床试验。
我们仅纳入NAFLD患者的随机临床试验(无论语言、盲法或状态如何),无论诊断方法、参与者的年龄和糖尿病状态,或是否存在非酒精性脂肪性肝炎(NASH)。我们排除了参与者先前接受过肝移植的随机临床试验。
我们尽可能使用贝叶斯方法通过OpenBUGS进行网状Meta分析,并根据美国国立卫生与临床优化研究所决策支持单位的指导,基于有效病例分析,使用风险比(HRs)、比值比(ORs)和率比以及95%可信区间(CrIs)计算治疗差异。
我们在综述中纳入了总共202项随机临床试验(14,200名参与者)。19项试验存在低偏倚风险。这些试验共比较了32种不同的干预措施。共有115项试验(7732名参与者)纳入了一项或多项比较。其余试验未报告本综述感兴趣的任何结果。随访时间从1个月到28个月不等。报告临床结果的试验的随访期为2个月到28个月。在此随访期间,与NAFLD相关的临床事件,如死亡率、肝硬化、肝失代偿、肝移植、肝细胞癌和肝脏相关死亡率很少见。由于数据稀少(试验中至少一组的事件数为零),我们未计算死亡率的效应估计值。没有试验报告他们使用经过验证的量表测量总体健康相关生活质量。关于干预措施对严重不良事件(人数或事件数)的影响,证据非常不确定。对于我们研究的大多数补充剂对不良事件的影响,我们非常不确定,因为证据的确定性非常低。然而,服用多不饱和脂肪酸(PUFA)的人可能比未接受积极干预的人更有可能经历不良事件(网状Meta分析结果:OR 4.44,95% CrI 2.40至8.48;低确定性证据;4项试验,203名参与者;直接证据:OR 4.43,95% CrI 2.43至8.42)。服用其他补充剂(包括维生素、脂肪酸、磷脂和抗氧化剂以外的营养补充剂)的人比未接受积极干预的人有更多的不良事件(网状Meta分析:率比1.73,95% CrI 1.26至2.41;6项试验,291名参与者;直接证据:率比1.72,95% CrI 1.25至2.40;低确定性证据)。肝移植、肝失代偿和肝细胞癌的数据稀少(试验中所有组的事件数均为零)。因此,我们未对这些结果进行正式分析。与无积极干预相比,关于其他抗氧化剂(维生素以外的抗氧化剂)对肝硬化的影响,证据非常不确定(HR 1.68,95% CrI 0.23至15.10;1项试验,99名参与者;极低确定性证据)。关于其余任何比较中干预措施的影响,证据非常不确定,或者数据稀少(至少一组的事件数为零),无法进行效应估计的正式计算。数据可能是由于随访期非常短(2个月到28个月)。需要8至28年的随访才能检测出NAFLD患者与一般人群之间的死亡率差异。因此,在随访时间少于5至10年的试验中不太可能注意到临床结果的差异。
证据表明,与不进行额外干预相比,营养补充对非酒精性脂肪性肝病患者所有临床结局的影响存在很大不确定性。因此,需要进行高质量的、有足够随访的随机对照临床试验。我们建议进行基于注册库的随机临床试验或队列多重随机临床试验(在大型纵向患者队列中对多种干预措施进行试验的研究设计,以提高效率并使试验更符合标准临床实践),比较维生素E、益生元/益生菌/合生元、多不饱和脂肪酸以及不进行营养补充等干预措施。选择这些干预措施的原因是它们对间接结局的影响,这可能转化为临床益处。此类试验的结局应包括死亡率、健康相关生活质量、失代偿性肝硬化、肝移植以及资源利用指标,包括干预成本和在至少8年的最小随访后医疗保健利用率的降低(以发现临床重要结局中有意义的差异)。