2013
Walker, R W; Sinatra, F; Hartiala, J; Weigensberg, M; Spruijt-Metz, D; Alderete, T L; Goran, M I; Allayee, H
Genetic and clinical markers of elevated liver fat content in overweight and obese Hispanic children Journal Article
In: Obesity (Silver Spring), vol. 21, no. 12, pp. E790–797, 2013.
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: genetic, liver fat
@article{pmid23804528,
title = {Genetic and clinical markers of elevated liver fat content in overweight and obese Hispanic children},
author = {R W Walker and F Sinatra and J Hartiala and M Weigensberg and D Spruijt-Metz and T L Alderete and M I Goran and H Allayee},
year = {2013},
date = {2013-12-01},
journal = {Obesity (Silver Spring)},
volume = {21},
number = {12},
pages = {E790--797},
abstract = {Genetic variation in six genes has been associated with elevated liver fat and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in adults. The influence of these genes on liver fat and whether a genetic risk score (GRS) would improve upon the ability of common clinical risk factors to predict elevated liver fat content (ELF) in Hispanic children was determined. 223 obese Hispanic children were genotyped for six SNPs. MRI was used to measure liver fat. A GRS was tested for association with ELF using multivariate linear regression. Predictors were assessed via ROC curves and pair-wise analysis was used to determine significance alone and combined with clinical markers. Only variants in PNPLA3 and APOC3 genes were associated with liver fat (P < 0.001},
keywords = {genetic, liver fat},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Genetic variation in six genes has been associated with elevated liver fat and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in adults. The influence of these genes on liver fat and whether a genetic risk score (GRS) would improve upon the ability of common clinical risk factors to predict elevated liver fat content (ELF) in Hispanic children was determined. 223 obese Hispanic children were genotyped for six SNPs. MRI was used to measure liver fat. A GRS was tested for association with ELF using multivariate linear regression. Predictors were assessed via ROC curves and pair-wise analysis was used to determine significance alone and combined with clinical markers. Only variants in PNPLA3 and APOC3 genes were associated with liver fat (P < 0.001