The University of Chicago Medical Center

01/23/2023 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 01/23/2023 12:28

People with obesity or type 2 diabetes should be screened for fatty liver disease

People with obesity or type 2 diabetes should be screened for fatty liver disease with a simple FIB-4 test, calculated from a common blood test, according to new recommendations from the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD).

The recommendations, authored by University of Chicago Medicine hepatologist Mary E. Rinella, MD, and being published in January 2023, are in response to the rising number of cases of fatty liver disease in the United States.

Rinella also co-authored the AASLD's 2018 recommendations for managing nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) with Michael R. Charlton, MBBS, UChicago Medicine Transplant Institute Co-Director and Director of the Center for Liver Diseases.

Fatty liver disease cases have increased fivefold over the last 10 years, and it is now the number one - and the fastest-growing - reason for liver transplant in women and in people over 65, Rinella said.

Fatty liver disease is expected to overtake excessive alcohol use as the main reason for liver transplant.

However, if fatty liver disease is diagnosed early with a FIB-4 test, it can be controlled, preventing further liver damage and disease.

Fatty liver disease is expected to overtake excessive alcohol use as the main reason for liver transplant.

The FIB-4 test estimates scarring in the liver based on age, platelet count and liver enzyme levels. If the results exceed certain thresholds, the patient can be further assessed with a liver stiffness test called a FibroScan™ to determine if there's evidence of serious liver disease.

More than 100 million people - roughly one out of every three adults in the U.S. - have NAFLD, a version of fatty liver disease where alcohol is not the main cause. While people can live with NAFLD, it greatly increases the risk of cirrhosis (and liver transplant), cancer, diabetes and cardiovascular disease.

NAFLD is most prevalent in people with severe obesity (90% have it), people who are overweight (75%) and people with type 2 diabetes (approximately 75%), according to the American Association of Clinical Endocrinology (AACE) and AASLD.