A groundbreaking study led by the Translational Genomics Research
Institute (TGen) involving nearly 2,300 extremely obese diabetes
patients, has identified
genes associated with unhealthy liver function.This is believed to be the nation's first large-scale genome-wide association study in overweight patients with diabetes. Results of the study, done in conjunction with the Geisinger Health
System, will be presented at the 64th annual meeting of the American
Association for the Study of Liver Diseases Nov. 1-5 at the Walter E.
Washington Convention Center in Washington, D.C. The study — Genome-wide analysis identifies loci associated with total
bilirubin levels, steatosis, and mild fibrosis in nonalcoholic fatty
liver disease — looked at how genomic factors affect the development of
non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. It was selected for presentation from
among a record 3,139 submittals from around the world proposed for what
also is known as The Liver Meeting 2013. "These genetic factors could help us identify patients who are most at
risk of developing non-alcoholic forms of fatty-liver disease (NAFLD),
and which patients may be more likely to progress to severe forms of
NAFLD, such as steatohepatitis (NASH)," said Dr. Johanna DiStefano, the
study's principal investigator and lead author. Dr. DiStefano is
Director of TGen's Diabetes, Cardiovascular and Metabolic Diseases
Division. NAFLD is the build up of extra fat in liver cells, not caused by
alcohol. It is one of the most common causes of chronic liver disease.
NASH is liver inflammation and damage caused by a buildup of fat in the
liver, not caused by alcohol. "Our results showed evidence for new genetic loci that may play a role
in the biological mechanisms of NAFLD and NASH," said Dr. Glenn S.
Gerhard, a faculty member of the Geisinger Obesity Institute and a
co-investigator of the study. "We discovered genes that may help identify those patients most at risk
for the types of liver disease so severe that they could require
transplants," said Dr. Gerhard, Administrative Director for the
Institute for Personalized Medicine at Penn State University-Hershey. Patients included in this study were those with extreme obesity enrolled in a bariatric surgery program. The study identified evidence for association with markers in the
neurocan gene (NCAN) on chromosome 19p12, and rs2501843 on chromosome 1.
Source:
Translational Genomics Research Institute
Source:
Translational Genomics Research Institute
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