Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease Improved With Exercise

Clinically meaningful treatment response occurs independently of weight loss.

HealthDay News Exercise is associated with a tripled likelihood of achieving a clinically meaningful treatment response for nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), according to a systematic review and meta-analysis published online Jan. 30 in The American Journal of Gastroenterology.

Jonathan G. Stine, M.D., from Pennsylvania State University in Hershey, and colleagues conducted a systematic literature review to examine the association between exercise training and achievement of validated thresholds of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-measured treatment response for NAFLD.

Based on 14 studies (551 participants), the authors found that individuals randomly assigned to exercise training were more likely to achieve ≥30% relative reduction in MRI-measured liver fat (odds ratio, 3.51) vs participants in the control condition. There was a significant treatment response seen for an exercise dose of ≥750 metabolic equivalents of task minutes/week (e.g., 150 minutes/week of brisk walking; OR, 3.73). However, lesser doses of exercise did not yield a treatment response. Treatment response occurred independently of clinically significant body weight loss (>5%).

Exercise is a lifestyle modification, so the fact that it might match the ability of in-development therapeutics to achieve the same outcome is significant,” Stine said in a statement. “Clinicians counseling patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease should recommend this amount of activity to their patients. Brisk walking or light cycling for a half an hour a day 5 times a week is just one example of a program that would meet these criteria.”

Two authors disclosed financial ties to the pharmaceutical industry.

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