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Table 4 The saturated effect of Baseline NonHDLc/HDLc ratio on the risk of NAFLD*

From: Non-HDL-cholesterol to HDL-cholesterol ratio is a better predictor of new-onset non-alcoholic fatty liver disease than non-HDL-cholesterol: a cohort study

 

Female

Male

Per-unit increase

Per-SD increase

Per-unit increase

Per-SD increase

NonHDLc/HDLc ratio ≤ 3.5

2.15 (1.30, 3.58), 0.003

1.81 (1.22, 2.68), 0.003

1.62 (1.17, 2.25), 0.004

1.45 (1.13, 1.87), 0.004

NonHDLc/HDLc ratio>3.5

0.00 (0.00, 45.96) 0.153

0.00 (0.00, 19.34), 0.153

0.58 (0.18, 1.86) 0.358

0.65 (0.26, 1.62), 0.358

  1. Data are Hazard ratio (95% CI), P value
  2. Adjusted* for age, body mass index, diastolic BP, systolic BP, fasting plasma glucose, TG,ALT, AST, development of cardiovascular disease or diabetes during follow-up