# Relationship Between Liver Steatosis, Pancreas Steatosis, Metabolic Comorbidities, and Subclinical Vascular Markers in Children with Obesity: An Imaging-Based Study

**Authors:** Kenza El Ghomari, Anna Voia, Jean-Baptiste Moretti, Anik Cloutier, Guy Cloutier, Ramy El Jalbout

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm14197048 · 2025-10-06

## TL;DR

This study explores how liver and pancreas fat in obese adolescents with MASLD relate to insulin resistance and early signs of heart disease using MRI and ultrasound.

## Contribution

The study introduces a reproducible imaging-based method to assess liver and pancreas steatosis in adolescents and links pancreas fat to early cardiovascular markers.

## Key findings

- Pancreas steatosis was positively correlated with insulin resistance and vascular markers like IMT and pericardial fat.
- Liver steatosis showed no significant correlation with pancreas steatosis or vascular markers.
- Visceral and intraperitoneal fat were negatively associated with vascular stiffness metrics.

## Abstract

Background: Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) is prevalent in adolescents with obesity and is linked to insulin resistance and cardiovascular disease (CVD). Pancreas steatosis might be associated with MASLD and early CVD. Imaging-based analyses of these associations have not been studied extensively in children. Objectives: To assess the reproducibility of liver and pancreatic steatosis and volume measurement on MRI in adolescents with obesity and MASLD and their association with homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) and subclinical vascular changes on ultrasound. Methods: This is an observational study on adolescents with MASLD and obesity. Hepatic and pancreatic steatosis, volume, and abdominal fat were assessed using magnetic resonance spectroscopy and proton density fat fraction. Reproducibility of these measurements was performed. Vascular markers included non-invasive vascular elastography (NIVE), carotid artery intima-media thickness (IMT), and pericardial fat thickness. Fasting blood tests measured the HOMA-IR. Bivariate correlation and simple linear regression were performed using SPSS. Results: We obtained 23 participants aged 12 to 17 years (78.3% male). Measurements were reproducible [ICC 0.807–0.998]. Liver steatosis was positively correlated with HOMA-IR (p = 0.015). Pancreas steatosis was positively correlated with HOMA-IR (p = 0.02), IMT/diameter (p = 0.002), and pericardial fat (p = 0.03). Liver steatosis was not significantly correlated with pancreas steatosis nor vascular markers. There were negative associations between NIVE metrics and visceral abdominal fat (p = 0.009) and intraperitoneal fat (p = 0.047). Conclusions: Liver and pancreas steatosis measurements on MRI are reproducible. In this exploratory study, adolescents with obesity and MASLD, pancreas steatosis, and pancreas volume show association with subclinical CVD markers. Visceral and intraperitoneal abdominal fat show association with increased vascular stiffness, suggesting a potential role of imaging-based cardiovascular risk assessment in this population if validated. These preliminary findings require validation in larger, diverse prospective cohorts.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** obesity (MONDO:0011122), metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MONDO:0013209), cardiovascular disease (MONDO:0004995)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** MASLD (MESH:D008107), CVD (MESH:D002318), Hepatic and pancreatic steatosis (MESH:D005234), insulin resistance (MESH:D007333), Obesity (MESH:D009765)

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12525386/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12525386