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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).
While it’s the most accurate means to diagnose and stage severity of NASH, biopsy is invasive, costly, and associated with potential complications, according to a recent Hepatology review article (2017 Dec 9. doi: 10.1002/hep.29721).
Criteria to pinpoint patients at highest risk for NASH and fibrosis could be useful for streamlining clinical trial enrollment and limiting screening failures, according to authors who recently described the pre-screening criteria in the Journal of Hepatology (2018 Feb. doi: 10.1016/j.jhep.2017.10.015).
, or who have a vibration controlled transient elastography (VCTE, FibroScan) score of kPa greater than 8.5, or an AST/ALT ratio greater than 1, among several other criteria described in the article.
“The patients who have a low likelihood of NASH and fibrosis are those who are under the age of 40, who may not be diabetic, who have a elastography score of kPa less than 7, or an AST less than 20,” Dr. Rustgi said of the pre-screening criteria.
In his presentation, Dr. Rustgi provided other notes on when to biopsy as described in the January 2018 practice guidance from Hepatology.
In particular, the guidance states that presence of metabolic syndrome, NAFLD fibrosis score or Fibrosis 4 Score, or liver stiffness measured by VCTE or magnetic resonance elastography might be used to help identify patients at risk for steatohepatitis or advanced fibrosis.
Liver biopsy also should be considered in NAFLD when competing etiologies cannot be excluded except by a liver biopsy, according to the recent guidance.
Dr. Rustgi reported disclosures related to AbbVie, Genfit, and Gilead Sciences.
Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same company.
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).
While it’s the most accurate means to diagnose and stage severity of NASH, biopsy is invasive, costly, and associated with potential complications, according to a recent Hepatology review article (2017 Dec 9. doi: 10.1002/hep.29721).
Criteria to pinpoint patients at highest risk for NASH and fibrosis could be useful for streamlining clinical trial enrollment and limiting screening failures, according to authors who recently described the pre-screening criteria in the Journal of Hepatology (2018 Feb. doi: 10.1016/j.jhep.2017.10.015).
, or who have a vibration controlled transient elastography (VCTE, FibroScan) score of kPa greater than 8.5, or an AST/ALT ratio greater than 1, among several other criteria described in the article.
“The patients who have a low likelihood of NASH and fibrosis are those who are under the age of 40, who may not be diabetic, who have a elastography score of kPa less than 7, or an AST less than 20,” Dr. Rustgi said of the pre-screening criteria.
In his presentation, Dr. Rustgi provided other notes on when to biopsy as described in the January 2018 practice guidance from Hepatology.
In particular, the guidance states that presence of metabolic syndrome, NAFLD fibrosis score or Fibrosis 4 Score, or liver stiffness measured by VCTE or magnetic resonance elastography might be used to help identify patients at risk for steatohepatitis or advanced fibrosis.
Liver biopsy also should be considered in NAFLD when competing etiologies cannot be excluded except by a liver biopsy, according to the recent guidance.
Dr. Rustgi reported disclosures related to AbbVie, Genfit, and Gilead Sciences.
Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same company.
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).
While it’s the most accurate means to diagnose and stage severity of NASH, biopsy is invasive, costly, and associated with potential complications, according to a recent Hepatology review article (2017 Dec 9. doi: 10.1002/hep.29721).
Criteria to pinpoint patients at highest risk for NASH and fibrosis could be useful for streamlining clinical trial enrollment and limiting screening failures, according to authors who recently described the pre-screening criteria in the Journal of Hepatology (2018 Feb. doi: 10.1016/j.jhep.2017.10.015).
, or who have a vibration controlled transient elastography (VCTE, FibroScan) score of kPa greater than 8.5, or an AST/ALT ratio greater than 1, among several other criteria described in the article.
“The patients who have a low likelihood of NASH and fibrosis are those who are under the age of 40, who may not be diabetic, who have a elastography score of kPa less than 7, or an AST less than 20,” Dr. Rustgi said of the pre-screening criteria.
In his presentation, Dr. Rustgi provided other notes on when to biopsy as described in the January 2018 practice guidance from Hepatology.
In particular, the guidance states that presence of metabolic syndrome, NAFLD fibrosis score or Fibrosis 4 Score, or liver stiffness measured by VCTE or magnetic resonance elastography might be used to help identify patients at risk for steatohepatitis or advanced fibrosis.
Liver biopsy also should be considered in NAFLD when competing etiologies cannot be excluded except by a liver biopsy, according to the recent guidance.
Dr. Rustgi reported disclosures related to AbbVie, Genfit, and Gilead Sciences.
Global Academy for Medical Education and this news organization are owned by the same company.
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