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Dietary Niacin Intake Predicts the Decrease of Liver Fat Content During a Lifestyle Intervention.

Katarzyna LinderCaroline WillmannKonstantinos KantartzisJürgen MachannFritz SchickMarjo GrafSabine KümmerleHans-Ulrich HäringAndreas FritscheNorbert StefanRobert Wagner
Published in: Scientific reports (2019)
Niacin inhibits fatty acid flux from adipose tissue to liver, reduces hepatic triglyceride synthesis and increases hepatic lipid oxidation. Thus, niacin may have a role in the regulation of liver fat content in humans. We tested if dietary intake of niacin predicts change of liver fat content during a lifestyle intervention. To this end, we estimated the composition of diet from diaries of 202 healthy subjects at risk of type 2 diabetes undergoing lifestyle intervention comprising physical activity and diet counselling. Total-, subcutaneous- and visceral adipose tissue mass were measured by magnetic resonance (MR) tomography and liver fat content by 1H-MR spectroscopy at baseline and after 9 months of follow-up. Among fat compartments, liver fat content showed the largest decrease (-32%, p < 0.0001). High baseline niacin intake predicted a larger decrease of liver fat (p = 0.004). Subjects in the highest quartile of niacin intake at baseline also had the largest decrease of liver fat (1st:-10%; 2nd:-27%; 3rd:-35%; 4th:-37%). Among 58 subjects with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) at baseline, NAFLD resolved in 23 subjects during the lifestyle intervention. For one standard deviation increase in niacin intake, the odds ratio for resolution of NAFLD was 1.77 (95% CI, 1.00-3.43). High dietary niacin intake may have a favorable effect on the reduction of liver fat during lifestyle intervention.
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