Background and purpose of the study: Liver inflammation and fibrosis are the key determinants of long-term adverse outcomes in metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD). Therefore, identifying progressive forms of MASLD is crucial. Lysosomal acid lipase (LAL), a central enzyme in intracellular lipid hydrolysis, has been reported to be reduced in MASLD and linked to liver injury. Aim: To evaluate whether baseline LAL activity predicts long-term progression of MASLD. Methods: We prospectively followed up 144 adults with biopsy-proven MASLD for a minimum of 5 years (median 8.1). All patients underwent a FibroScan® at baseline and follow-up and 94 of them also had paired liver biopsies. LAL activity (expressed as LAL/platelet-LAL/ptls) was measured on dried blood spots. Liver disease progression was defined by meeting of the histological endpoint at follow-up (i.e., development of MASH and/or NAS worsening ≥ 1 point and/or fibrosis progression ≥ 1 stage) or by liver stiffness measurement (LSM) worsening at Fibroscan. Results: Among the 94 biopsied patients, 26% met the composite histological endpoint and had significantly lower baseline LAL/ptls ratio, higher HOMA-IR, CAP and LSM. In particular, lower LAL/ptls was strongly related to the worsening of inflammation. In multivariate analysis, lower ln-transformed LAL/ptls ratio independently predicted histological progression (OR 0.51, 95% CI 0.04-0.60, p = 0.018). No association emerged between baseline LAL/ptls ratio and non-invasive progression by FibroScan. Conclusions: Lower LAL/ptls ratio identifies MASLD patients at increased risk of histological progression and complements non-invasive tools by reflecting biological pathways linked to inflammation.

Low lysosomal acid lipase activity is associated with histological progression of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease / R. Lombardi, F. Cinque, A. Cespiati, C. Bertelli, G. Pisano, G. Oberti, E. Fatta, J. Currà, E. Calzavara, F. Alletto, C. Garavaglia, G. Cincotto, A.L. Fracanzani, M. Gomaraschi. - In: HEPATOLOGY INTERNATIONAL. - ISSN 1936-0533. - (2026). [Epub ahead of print] [10.1007/s12072-026-11084-6]

Low lysosomal acid lipase activity is associated with histological progression of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease

R. Lombardi
Primo
;
F. Cinque;A. Cespiati;C. Bertelli;G. Pisano;G. Oberti;E. Fatta;E. Calzavara;F. Alletto;C. Garavaglia;G. Cincotto;A.L. Fracanzani
Co-ultimo
;
M. Gomaraschi
Co-ultimo
2026

Abstract

Background and purpose of the study: Liver inflammation and fibrosis are the key determinants of long-term adverse outcomes in metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD). Therefore, identifying progressive forms of MASLD is crucial. Lysosomal acid lipase (LAL), a central enzyme in intracellular lipid hydrolysis, has been reported to be reduced in MASLD and linked to liver injury. Aim: To evaluate whether baseline LAL activity predicts long-term progression of MASLD. Methods: We prospectively followed up 144 adults with biopsy-proven MASLD for a minimum of 5 years (median 8.1). All patients underwent a FibroScan® at baseline and follow-up and 94 of them also had paired liver biopsies. LAL activity (expressed as LAL/platelet-LAL/ptls) was measured on dried blood spots. Liver disease progression was defined by meeting of the histological endpoint at follow-up (i.e., development of MASH and/or NAS worsening ≥ 1 point and/or fibrosis progression ≥ 1 stage) or by liver stiffness measurement (LSM) worsening at Fibroscan. Results: Among the 94 biopsied patients, 26% met the composite histological endpoint and had significantly lower baseline LAL/ptls ratio, higher HOMA-IR, CAP and LSM. In particular, lower LAL/ptls was strongly related to the worsening of inflammation. In multivariate analysis, lower ln-transformed LAL/ptls ratio independently predicted histological progression (OR 0.51, 95% CI 0.04-0.60, p = 0.018). No association emerged between baseline LAL/ptls ratio and non-invasive progression by FibroScan. Conclusions: Lower LAL/ptls ratio identifies MASLD patients at increased risk of histological progression and complements non-invasive tools by reflecting biological pathways linked to inflammation.
Biomarker; Disease progression; Fibroscan; Hepatic fibrosis; Hepatic inflammation; Lipid metabolism; Liver biopsy; Liver injury; Liver stiffness measurement; MASH
Settore MEDS-05/A - Medicina interna
   Identification of lipid biomarkers to dissect hepatic and cardiovascular complication in NAFLD adult and children patients through a lipidomic approach
   MINISTERO DELLA SALUTE
   RF-2021-12374481

   Assegnazione Dipartimenti di Eccellenza 2023-2027 - Dipartimento di FISIOPATOLOGIA MEDICO-CHIRURGICA E DEI TRAPIANTI
   DECC23_009
   MINISTERO DELL'UNIVERSITA' E DELLA RICERCA
2026
22-apr-2026
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1237995
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