Back to Search Start Over

Towards collaborative management of non‐alcoholic fatty liver disease: a ‘real‐world’ pathway for fibrosis risk assessment in primary care

Authors :
Sue Williams
Leigh U. Horsfall
Katharine M. Irvine
Katerina Liew
Amy L Johnson
Elizabeth E. Powell
Steven M. McPhail
Kelly L. Hayward
Ingrid Weate
Benjamin J McKillen
Patricia C. Valery
Laurence J. Britton
Jo Sexton
William Rosenberg
Carolyn McIvor
Source :
Internal Medicine Journal. 52:1749-1758
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

Background The optimal strategy to support primary care practitioners (PCPs) to assess fibrosis severity in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and thereby make appropriate management decisions remains unclear. Aims We aimed to examine the feasibility of using a 2-step pathway that combined simple scores (NAFLD Fibrosis Score and Fibrosis-4 Index) with transient elastography (FibroScan®) to streamline NAFLD referrals from a 'routine' primary care population to specialist hepatology management clinics (HMC). Methods The 2-step "Towards Collaborative Management of NAFLD" (TCM-NAFLD) fibrosis risk assessment pathway was implemented at two outer metropolitan primary healthcare practices in Brisbane. Patients aged ≥18 years with a new or established PCP-diagnosis of NAFLD were eligible for assessment. The pathway triaged patients at "high risk" of clinically significant fibrosis to HMC for specialist review, and "low risk" patients to receive ongoing management and longitudinal follow-up in primary care. Results A total of 162 patient assessments between Jun-2019 and Dec-2020 were included. Mean age was 58.7 ± 11.7 years, 30.9% were male, 54.3% had type 2 diabetes or impaired fasting glucose, and mean body mass index was 34.2 ± 6.9 kg/m2 . 122 patients were considered "low risk" for clinically significant fibrosis, two patients had incomplete assessments, and 38 (23.5%) were triaged to HMC. Among 31 completed HMC assessments to date, 45.2% were considered to have clinically significant (or more advanced) fibrosis, representing 9.2% of 153 completed assessments. Conclusion Implementation of the 2-step TCM-NAFLD pathway streamlined hepatology referrals for NAFLD and may facilitate a more cost-effective and targeted use of specialist hepatology resources. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Details

ISSN :
14455994 and 14440903
Volume :
52
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Internal Medicine Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....94ffd5c961743840a399a849ee710653
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/imj.15422