Fetuin-A Can Assess the Severity of Alcohol-Related Liver Disease
Musa Salmanoğlu, İrfan Küçük, Süleyman Baş

TL;DR
This study shows that lower levels of a liver-produced protein called fetuin-A are linked to more severe alcohol-related liver disease, suggesting it could help track disease progression.
Contribution
The study introduces fetuin-A as a potential biomarker for assessing severity in alcohol-associated cirrhosis.
Findings
SFA levels were significantly lower in alcohol-associated cirrhosis patients compared to those with steatotic liver.
Lower SFA levels correlated with higher disease severity scores in cirrhosis patients.
SFA levels showed inverse correlations with Child–Pugh and MELD-Na scores in cirrhosis and hepatitis groups.
Abstract
Background and Objectives: Fetuin-A is mostly synthesized in the liver. It is a hepatokine, which is an extracellular inhibitor of growth factors. There is a scarcity of data on the clinical utility of serum fetuin-A (SFA) in alcohol-associated cirrhosis (AC). We first investigated the association between SFA levels and disease phenotypes in alcoholic liver disease (ALD) patients, including alcohol-associated steatotic liver (ASL) and alcohol-associated hepatitis (AH), along with AC patients. Materials and Methods: There were 26 healthy controls and 64 ALD patients in this case–control study. The severity of the disease in the AC patients was evaluated using the Child–Pugh classification (CPC-A, -B, and -C), and the FH and AC patients’ Maddrey’s differential function scores and the Model of End-Stage Liver Disease Sodium (MELD-Na) scores were computed. We measured SFA levels using a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLiver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment · Alcohol Consumption and Health Effects · Diet, Metabolism, and Disease
