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MAFLD: a multisystem disease.

Rosaria Maria PipitoneCarlo CiccioliGiuseppe InfantinoClaudia La MantiaStefanie ParisiAdele TuloneGrazia PennisiStefania GrimaudoSalvatore Petta
Published in: Therapeutic advances in endocrinology and metabolism (2023)
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), affecting about 25% of general population and more than 50% of dysmetabolic patients, is an emerging cause of chronic liver disease and its complications. Recently, an international consensus of experts proposed to rename this disease as 'Metabolic dysfunction-Associated Fatty Liver Disease' (MAFLD) to focus on the bidirectional interplay between fatty liver and metabolic alterations and to stress the need of assessing fatty liver independently from alcohol consumption and other coexisting causes of liver disease. The peculiarity of NAFLD/MAFLD lies in the presence of a higher risk of not only - as expected - liver-related events but also of extrahepatic events, mostly cardiovascular and cancers. Available evidence suggests that these associations are not only the expression of sharing the same risk factors but shed light about the ability of NAFLD/MAFLD and particularly of its progressive form - nonalcoholic/metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis - to act as an independent risk factor via promotion of atherogenic dyslipidemia and a proinflammatory, profibrogenic, and procoagulant systemic environment. The present review summarizes available epidemiological and clinical evidence supporting the concept of NAFLD/MAFLD as a multisystemic disease, and highlights potential explanatory mechanisms underlying the association between NAFLD/MAFLD and extrahepatic disorders.
Keyphrases
  • risk factors
  • alcohol consumption
  • ejection fraction
  • oxidative stress
  • end stage renal disease
  • newly diagnosed
  • poor prognosis
  • healthcare
  • social media
  • clinical practice
  • patient reported outcomes
  • binding protein