Conference Coverage

Pre-screening could help identify NAFLD biopsy candidates


 

REPORTING FROM DIGESTIVE DISEASES: NEW ADVANCES

PHILADELPHIA – When evaluating patients with established non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), using pre-screening criteria may help identify the subset of patients who should be subjected to liver biopsy, according to Vinod K. Rustgi, MD.

The recently described pre-screening criteria include a set of patient and disease characteristics that identify who might be at highest risk for non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) and fibrosis, said Dr. Rustgi, chief of hepatology at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in New Brunswick, N.J.

“Eighty-five percent of the patients who fall into this category will actually have fibrosis on liver biopsy. So it’s a good way to screen out who you want to actually biopsy,” Dr. Rustgi said at the meeting, jointly provided by Rutgers and Global Academy for Medical Education.

Liver biopsy needs to be considered in patients with NAFLD who are at increased risk of having advanced fibrosis, according to the latest practice guidance on diagnosis and management of NAFLD (Hepatology. 2018 Jan;67[1]:328-57).

Pages

Recommended Reading

Sofosbuvir/ledipasvir looks good in HBV coinfected patients
MDedge Internal Medicine
HCV screening, care inadequate for young adults who use opioids nonmedically
MDedge Internal Medicine
National Early Warning Score discriminates deterioration of inpatients with liver disease
MDedge Internal Medicine
Liver cancer deaths expected to increase again in 2018
MDedge Internal Medicine
Viremic suppression linked to decreased MACE rate in patients with HCV-cirrhosis
MDedge Internal Medicine
ACIP unanimously recommends HEPLISAV-B
MDedge Internal Medicine
NASH rapidly overtaking hepatitis C as cause of liver cancer
MDedge Internal Medicine
Racial disparities by region persist despite multiple liver transplant allocation schemes
MDedge Internal Medicine
Bioengineered liver models screen drugs and study liver injury
MDedge Internal Medicine
Gut bacteria could drive autoimmune response in genetically predisposed
MDedge Internal Medicine