Published October 9, 2024 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Body composition and muscle composition phenotypes in patients on waitlist and shortly after liver transplant – results from a pilot study

  • 1. Linköping University
  • 2. Northwestern University
  • 3. University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
  • 4. AMRA Medical AB
  • 5. University of Chicago

Description

Background: Sarcopenia is common in end-stage liver disease and negatively impacts patients awaiting or undergoing liver transplantation (LT). Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may be used to measure body composition and sarcopenia. We aimed to evaluate the feasibility of MRI-based LT body composition profiling, describe waitlist body composition, and assess the natural rate of change in body composition while on the waitlist and post-LT.

Methods: This prospective pilot study recruited adults listed for LT at an urban, tertiary care facility. Eighteen participants were scanned at time of waitlisting and 15 had follow-up MRIs (waitlist and/or post-LT). An 8-min MRI was used to measure body composition (AMRA® Researcher) including thigh fat-free muscle volume (FFMV) and fat infiltration (MFI), visceral (VAT) and abdominal subcutaneous (ASAT) adipose tissue volumes, and liver fat. A sex- and BMI invariant FFMV z-score (z-FFMV) was calculated, and muscle composition (MC) phenotypes were defined using the muscle assessment score (consisting of the FFMV z-score and sex-adjusted MFI). Rate of body composition change was calculated using mixed-effect modelling and is presented as rate per 30 days.

Results: At time of waitlisting, 73% of the 18 participants had high MFI and 39% had the adverse MC (low FFMV z-score and high MFI) phenotype. Seven participants received an LT. Post-LT serial MRIs, at a median of 147 days apart within the first 200 days post-LT, demonstrated increased z-FFMV 0.22 SDs/(30 days) (p = 0.002), VAT 0.23 (p < 0.001), and ASAT 0.52 (p = 0.001) L/(30 days), but no change in MFI (p = 0.200) nor liver fat (p = 0.232).

Conclusion: MRI-based body composition profiling is feasible in LT patients and shortly after LT. This can be amended to routine clinical scans and may help in early identification of patients who may benefit from interventions to improve body composition. In addition, body composition changes significantly over time after LT.

Data availability

The datasets used and/or analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request. Additional data from UK Biobank used in this study are publicly available through UK Biobank (Category 149, Abdominal composition).

Files

Body-composition-and-muscle-composition-phenotypes-in-patients-on-waitlist-and-shortly-after-liver-transplant.pdf

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1186/s12876-024-03425-2
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:13690

Funding

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences
UL1TR001422
Northwestern Medicine
Transplant Endowment Grant
National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute
K23HL136891
National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute
R56HL155093

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Pritzker School of Medicine