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A multisociety Delphi consensus statement on new fatty liver disease nomenclature

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info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Date

2023

Author

Rinella, Mary E.
Lazarus, Jeffrey V.
Ratziu, Vlad
Francque, Sven M.
Sanyal, Arun J.
Kanwal, Fasiha
Romero, Diana
Abdelmalek, Manal F.
Anstee, Quentin M.
Arab, Juan Pablo
Arrese, Marco
Bataller, Ramon
Beuers, Ulrich
Boursier, Jerome
Bugianesi, Elisabetta
Byrne, Christopher D.
Castro Narro, Graciela E.
Chowdhury, Abhijit
Cortez-Pinto, Helena
Cryer, Donna R.
Cusi, Kenneth
El-Kassas, Mohamed
Klein, Samuel
Eskridge, Wayne
Fan, Jiangao
Gawrieh, Samer
Guy, Cynthia D.
Harrison, Stephen A.
Kim, Seung Up
Koot, Bart G.
Korenjak, Marko
Kowdley, Kris V.
Lacaille, Florence
Loomba, Rohit
Mitchell-Thain, Robert
Morgan, Timothy R.
Powell, Elisabeth E.
Roden, Michael
Romero-Gómez, Manuel
Silva, Marcelo
Singh, Shivaram Prasad
Sookoian, Silvia C.
Spearman, C. Wendy
Tiniakos, Dina
Valenti, Luca
Vos, Miriam B.
Wong, Vincent Wai-Sun
Xanthakos, Stavra
Yılmaz, Yusuf
Younossi, Zobair
Hobbs, Ansley
Villota-Rivas, Marcela
Newsome, Philip N.

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Citation

Rinella, M. E., Lazarus, J. V., Ratziu, V., Francque, S. M., Sanyal, A. J., Kanwal, F., Romero, D., Abdelmalek, M. F., Anstee, Q. M., Arab, J. P., Arrese, M., Bataller, R., Beuers, U., Boursier, J., Bugianesi, E., Byrne, C. D., Castro Narro, G. E., Chowdhury, A., Cortez-Pinto, H., Cryer, D. R., … NAFLD Nomenclature consensus group (2023). A multisociety Delphi consensus statement on new fatty liver disease nomenclature. Journal of hepatology, 79(6), 1542–1556. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhep.2023.06.003

Abstract

The principal limitations of the terms NAFLD and NASH are the reliance on exclusionary confounder terms and the use of potentially stigmatising language. This study set out to determine if content experts and patient advocates were in favour of a change in nomenclature and/or definition. A modified Delphi process was led by three large pan-national liver associations. The consensus was defined a priori as a supermajority (67%) vote. An independent committee of experts external to the nomenclature process made the final recommendation on the acronym and its diagnostic criteria. A total of 236 panellists from 56 countries participated in 4 online surveys and 2 hybrid meetings. Response rates across the 4 survey rounds were 87%, 83%, 83%, and 78%, respectively. Seventy-four percent of respondents felt that the current nomenclature was sufficiently flawed to consider a name change. The terms "nonalcoholic" and "fatty" were felt to be stigmatising by 61% and 66% of respondents, respectively. Steatotic liver disease was chosen as an overarching term to encompass the various aetiologies of steatosis. The term steato-hepatitis was felt to be an important pathophysiological concept that should be retained. The name chosen to replace NAFLD was metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD). There was consensus to change the definition to include the presence of at least 1 of 5 cardiometabolic risk factors. Those with no metabolic parameters and no known cause were deemed to have cryptogenic steatotic liver disease. A new category, outside pure metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease, termed metabolic and alcohol related/associated liver disease (MetALD), was selected to describe those with metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease, who consume greater amounts of alcohol per week (140-350 g/wk and 210-420 g/ wk for females and males, respectively). The new nomenclature and diagnostic criteria are widely supported and non-stigmatising, and can improve awareness and patient identification.

Source

Journal of Hepatology

Volume

79

Issue

6

URI

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhep.2023.06.003
https://hdl.handle.net/11436/8920

Collections

  • PubMed İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu [2443]
  • Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu [5931]
  • TF, Dahili Tıp Bilimleri Bölümü Koleksiyonu [1559]



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