Low sphingolipid levels predict poor survival in patients with alcohol-related liver disease

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Background & Aims
Alcohol-related hepatitis (AH) and alcohol-related cirrhosis are grave conditions with poor prognoses. Altered hepatic lipid metabolism can impact disease development and varies between different alcohol-related liver diseases. Therefore, we aimed to investigate lipidomics and metabolomics at various stages of alcohol-related liver diseases and their correlation with survival.

Methods
Patients with newly diagnosed alcohol-related cirrhosis, who currently used alcohol (ALC-A), stable outpatients with decompensated alcohol-related cirrhosis with at least 8 weeks of alcohol abstinence (ALC), and patients with AH, were compared with each other and with healthy controls (HC). Circulating lipids and metabolites were analysed using HPLC and mass spectrometry.

Results
Forty patients with ALC, 95 with ALC-A, 30 with AH, and 42 HC provided plasma. Lipid levels changed according to disease severity, with generally lower levels in AH and cirrhosis than in the HC group; this was most pronounced for AH, followed by ALC-A. Nine out of 10 free fatty acids differed between cirrhosis groups by relative increases of 0.12–0.66 in ALC compared with the ALC-A group (p <0.0005). For metabolomics, total bile acids increased by 19.7, 31.3, and 80.4 in the ALC, ALC-A, and AH groups, respectively, compared with HC (all p <0.0001). Low sphingolipid ([d42:1] and [d41:1]) levels could not predict 180-day mortality (AUC = 0.73, p = 0.95 and AUC = 0.73, p = 0.95) more accurately than the model for end-stage liver disease score (AUC = 0.71), but did predict 90-day mortality (AUC d42:1 = 0.922, AUC d41:1 = 0.893; p d42:1 = 0.005, p d41:1 = 0.007) more accurately than the MELD score AUCMELD = 0.70, pMELD = 0.19).

Conclusions
Alcohol-related severe liver disease is characterised by low lipid levels progressing with severity of liver disease, especially low sphingomyelins, which also associate to poor prognoses.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummer100953
TidsskriftJHEP Reports
Vol/bind6
Udgave nummer2
Antal sider15
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2024

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
The study received funding from the Beckett Foundation (ref. no. 20-2-6102) and Hvidovre University Hospital Research Foundation ( AHH-2021-NK ). NK conducted the study as part of her postdoctoral fellowship at University of Copenhagen (bridge.ku.dk), which was financed by the Novo Nordisk Foundation ( NNF18SA0034956 ). QG, KT, and TM were supported via the Novo Nordisk Foundation (grant no. NNF18CC0034900 ).

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors

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