Poster Session II - A314 LOWER VISCERAL FAT ASSOCIATES WITH ACTIVE DISEASE IN MEN BUT NOT WOMEN WITH INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASES
B Maracle, D Hazra, K Novak, C Lu, G G Kaplan, M Raman, J Besney, R Reji, A AlDarwish, C Seow, R Ingram, C Ma, R Panaccione, J St-Pierre

TL;DR
This study found that lower visceral fat is linked to active inflammatory bowel disease in men but not in women.
Contribution
The study reveals a sex-specific relationship between visceral fat and IBD activity, suggesting the need for sex-based biomarker evaluation.
Findings
VAT thickness was significantly lower in men with active IBD compared to those in remission.
VAT did not differ between active and inactive disease in women.
VAT correlated strongly with BMI in both sexes.
Abstract
Visceral adipose tissue (VAT) is a metabolically active organ that modulates systemic and intestinal inflammation. While VAT expansion has been linked to metabolic dysfunction in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), the influence of sex-specific adipose distribution remains largely unexplored. We aimed to characterize the relationship between VAT measured by ultrasound (US) and disease activity, stratified by sex. We conducted a cross-sectional, single-centre study of adults with IBD between January 2024 and August 2025. VAT thickness was measured by US. Clinical data was collected, along with clinical indices, biochemical markers and endoscopic findings. Composite disease activity was defined as active inflammation on ≥ 1 of the following within 3 months: IUS (bowel wall thickness >3 mm and/or hyperemia), endoscopic activity, CRP >8mg/L, fecal calprotectin >250mcg/g, or symptomatic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInflammatory Bowel Disease · Gastrointestinal motility and disorders · Microscopic Colitis
