New clinical practice guidelines for the diagnosis and management of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) are the first to be targeted specifically to primary care and endocrinology clinical settings.
They include 34 evidence-based clinical practice recommendations for screening, diagnosis, management, and referral, presented in a table and an algorithm flow chart as well as detailed text.
The new guidelines are by the American Association of Clinical Endocrinology and cosponsored by the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. They were presented at the annual scientific & clinical congress of the AACE and simultaneously published in Endocrine Practice.
These are “the first of this type for this field of medicine. The vast majority of patients with NAFLD are being seen in the primary care and endocrinology settings. Only when they get to the more advanced disease are they being referred to the liver specialists. So, we need to be the ones who are diagnosing and managing these patients because there just aren’t enough liver specialists to do that,” Scott Isaacs, MD, cochair of the writing panel for the guidelines, said in an interview.
80 million Americans have NAFLD, but very few are aware
The spectrum of NAFLD ranges from nonprogressive steatosis to the progressive conditions nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, fibrotic NASH, and end-stage NASH cirrhosis. And NASH, in turn, is a major cause of liver cancer. NAFLD is also strongly associated with insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, atherogenesis, and myocardial dysfunction.
The global prevalence of NAFLD is about 25% and NASH, about 12%-14%. However, a recent study found that, among patients in endocrine and primary care clinics, more than 70% of patients with type 2 diabetes and more than 90% with type 2 diabetes who had a body mass index above 35 kg/m2 also had NAFLD, and more than 20% of those patients had significant liver fibrosis.
Problematically, very few people are aware they have either. “It’s so common. At least 80 million Americans have this but only about 6% know they have it. We talk about it a lot, but it’s not talked about enough,” said Dr. Isaacs, an endocrinologist who practices in Atlanta.
In fact, most cases of NAFLD are diagnosed incidentally when people undergo an ultrasound or a CT scan for another reason. And, in about 70% of cases the liver enzymes are normal, and those patients rarely undergo liver workups, Dr. Isaacs noted.
In an accompanying editorial, Suthat Liangpunsakul, MD, wrote: “In my perspective, as a hepatologist, this AACE guideline is very practical and easy to incorporate into routine practice in primary care and endocrinology settings. ... Early identification and risk stratification of patients with NAFLD, especially the degree of hepatic fibrosis, are required to reduce downstream health care costs and triage unwarranted specialty care referrals.”
And “an effective screening strategy may also identify those in primary care and endocrinology settings who may benefit from an appropriate referral to hepatologists before the development of portal hypertension complications, decompensated liver disease, and hepatocellular carcinoma,” added Dr. Liangpunsakul, professor of medicine in the division of gastroenterology and hepatology at Indiana University, Indianapolis.