Effect of aerobic exercise training on the fat fraction of the liver in persons with chronic hepatitis B and hepatic steatosis: Trial protocol for a randomized controlled intervention trial— The FitLiver study

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Background
The global prevalence of chronic hepatitis B is more than 300 million people, and in Denmark, 17,000 people are estimated to have chronic hepatitis B. Untreated, chronic hepatitis B can lead to the development of liver cirrhosis and liver cancer. There is no curable therapy. In persons with obesity and chronic hepatitis B infection, the development of hepatic steatosis imposes a double burden on the liver, leading to an increased risk of cirrhosis and liver cancer. In patients without chronic hepatitis B, exercise interventions have shown beneficial effects on hepatic steatosis through improvements in fat fraction of the liver, insulin resistance, fatty acid metabolism, and glucose metabolism, as well as activation of liver-induced regulatory protein secretion (hepatokines) after the exercise intervention.

Objective
To investigate in persons with chronic hepatitis B and hepatic steatosis:

Primary: Whether exercise will decrease the fat fraction of the liver.

Secondary: If exercise will affect hepatokine secretion and if it will improve lipid- and glucose metabolism, liver status, markers of inflammation, body composition, and blood pressure.

Methods
A randomized, controlled, clinical intervention trial consisting of 12 weeks of aerobic exercise training or no intervention. Thirty persons with chronic hepatitis B and hepatic steatosis will be randomized 1:1. Before and after the intervention, participants will undergo an MRI scan of the liver, blood sampling, oral glucose tolerance test, fibroscan, VO2max test, DXA scan, blood pressure measurements, and optional liver biopsy. Lastly, a hormone infusion test with somatostatin and glucagon to increase the glucagon/insulin ratio for stimulating secretion of circulating hepatokines will be performed. The training program includes three weekly training sessions of 40 min/session over 12 weeks.

Discussion
This trial, investigating high-intensity interval training in persons with chronic hepatitis B and hepatic steatosis, is the first exercise intervention trial performed on this group of patients. If exercise reduces hepatic steatosis and induces other beneficial effects of clinical markers in this group of patients, there might be an indication to recommend exercise as part of treatment. Furthermore, the investigation of the effect of exercise on hepatokine secretion will provide more knowledge on the effects of exercise on the liver.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummer398
TidsskriftTrials
Vol/bind24
Udgave nummer1
Antal sider16
ISSN1745-6215
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2023

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
Open access funding provided by Royal Danish Library. The project is supported financially by the Centre for Physical Activity Research, which is supported by TrygFonden (grants ID 101390, ID 20045, and ID 125132). for the salary of the primary investigator and a project nurse, hormones, blood sample analysis, DXA scans, and exercise training facilities, and by the Beckett Foundation for paraclinical analysis, by the Holms Memory foundation, and by the Department of Infectious Diseases, Copenhagen University Hospital, Hvidovre for salary for the primary investigator. The trial is investigator-initiated and financial supporters have no influence on the design of the trial, collection, analysis, and interpretation of data. None of the clinical investigators has a financial affiliation with financial supporters or other stakeholders in this trial. There are no commercial interests in the project.

Funding Information:
We would like to thank the Centre for Physical Activity’s staff and researchers, the Department of Infectious Diseases, Hvidovre Hospital clinicians and staff, the Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Rigshospitalet clinicians and staff, and the Department of Physiotherapy, Hvidovre Hospital physiotherapist and staff for their support in the design and practical set-up of this trial.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s).

ID: 374405696