Enhanced venous thrombosis and hypercoagulability in murine and human metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis Article

Full Text via DOI: 10.1016/j.jtha.2024.08.023 Web of Science: 001370513300001

Cited authors

  • Pandey N, Anand SK, Kaur H, Richard KSE, Chandaluri L, Butler ME, Zhang XL, Pearson-Gallion B, Rohilla S, Das S, Magdy T, Sethu P, Núñez KG, Orr AW, Stokes KY, Thevenot PT, Cohen AJ, Rom O, Dhanesha N

Abstract

  • Background: Patients with metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) are at an increased risk of developing venous thromboembolic events, including deep vein thrombosis (DVT). To date, the study of DVT in MASH has been hampered by the lack of reliable models that mimic the pathologic aspects of human disease. Objectives: To evaluate DVT severity and hypercoagulability in murine and human MASH. Methods: Transcriptional changes in the liver, plasma markers of coagulation, and DVT severity were evaluated in mice fed a standard chow diet or a high-fructose, high-fat, and high-cholesterol MASH diet for 24 weeks. Plasma analyses of coagulation markers and thrombin generation assays were performed in a well-characterized cohort of patients with or without MASH. Results: Mice fed the MASH diet developed steatohepatitis and fibrosis, mimicking human MASH. Liver RNA sequencing revealed a significant upregulation of pathways related to inflammation and coagulation concomitant with increased levels of plasma coagulation markers including increased prothrombin fragment 1+2, thrombinantithrombin complex, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 levels, and endothelin 1. MASH exacerbated DVT severity in mice, as evidenced by increased thrombus weight and higher thrombosis incidence (15/15 vs 11/15 in controls, P = .0317). Higher endothelin 1 release and increased apoptosis were found in endothelial cells stimulated with supernatants of palmitate-stimulated HepG2 cells. Patients with

Publication date

  • 2024

Published in

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 1538-7933

Number of pages

  • 9

Start page

  • 3572

End page

  • 3580

Volume

  • 22

Issue

  • 12