News, Analysis, Trends, Management Innovations for
Clinical Laboratories and Pathology Groups

Hosted by Robert Michel

News, Analysis, Trends, Management Innovations for
Clinical Laboratories and Pathology Groups

Hosted by Robert Michel

Sign In

Virginia Commonwealth University Study Determines 40% of Americans Have Liver Disease

Clinical laboratories and anatomic pathology groups should prepare for a marked increase in orders for liver disease testing

New research from Virginia Commonwealth University’s Institute for Liver Disease and Metabolic Health in Richmond shows that four out of every 10 Americans has fatty liver disease of some type, according to a news release. Forty percent of Americans is an astonishing number! The study’s findings will almost certainly lead to clinical laboratories performing more testing in support of diagnosis, treatment decision making, and patient monitoring for liver disease than currently ordered by physicians.

Hepatologist Juan Pablo Arab, MD, director of alcohol sciences at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU), led the team that conducted the research. He noted that the driving force behind the numbers is obesity and type two diabetes.

The researchers based their study on data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, which recorded the health of more than 5,000 individuals from 2017 to 2018, Newsmax reported.

“By 2018, federal data showed that 42% of adults had some form of fatty liver disease—higher than prior estimates,” Arab’s team told Newsmax, adding that “Hispanic adults were at especially high risk … with nearly half (47%) affected.”

The scientists published their findings in Nature Communications Medicine titled, “Disparities in Steatosis Prevalence in the United States by Race or Ethnicity according to the 2023 Criteria.”

“This study highlights a significant health issue that affects a large portion of the US population, and it shows that certain groups are at a higher risk. We hope these findings will guide more targeted health interventions to reduce the burden of liver disease, especially in high-risk communities,” said Juan Pablo Arab, MD (above), hepatologist with VCU’s Institute for Liver Disease and Metabolic Health, director of alcohol sciences, and lead researcher in the VCU study, in a VCU news release. These insights can be expected to lead to guidelines calling for more clinical laboratory testing associated with the diagnosis of fatty liver disease. (Photo copyright: Virginia Commonwealth University.)

Clinical Laboratory Testing

The VCU researchers found that metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), also known as nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), was primarily brought on by obesity and type 2 diabetes.

“Groups at greater risk for MASLD include men, adults older than 40, individuals with health insurance, those with higher body mass index, and people with other health issues like diabetes, high blood pressure, high triglycerides, and low levels of good cholesterol. Interestingly, the study found that black individuals had the lowest risk of developing MASLD compared with other groups,” the VCU news release notes.

Fatty liver disease can also be caused by excessive alcohol consumption (called alcohol-associated liver disease or ALD) or a combination of both metabolic dysfunction and moderate-to-high alcohol intake, which is called MetALD, Newsmax reported.

“Although MASLD was the most common type of liver disease found in this study, the researchers also uncovered substantial rates of MetALD and alcohol-associated liver disease. For MetALD, the study showed that men and individuals with a higher BMI [body mass index] were at a greater risk, and Asians were at lower risk. Surprisingly, the only factor that appeared to lower the risk of ALD was having health insurance, though the reasons for this are not clear,” according to the VCU news release.

On its website, Mayo Clinic notes that NAFLD is often symptomless, and that doctors typically depend on routine clinical laboratory blood test results to reach a diagnosis. Additional testing helps determine whether higher than normal liver enzymes are actually from fatty liver disease or some other condition.

Medical laboratories play a key role in facilitating the final diagnoses. According to Mayo Clinic, blood tests to identify liver disease include:

Medical imaging could also be required to reach a diagnosis, beginning with an abdominal ultrasound, Mayo Clinic added. Additionally, more precise tests may be ordered to determine the stiffness of the liver and likelihood of scarring or fibrosis. Those modalities include:

Labs will often perform these tests on the same patient multiple times as the patient’s lifestyle changes. A liver biopsy may also be required to determine severity of damage, Mayo Clinic added.

Increase in Testing

Fatty liver disease at its most severe can lead to acute liver failure and fatal kidney complications, the American Liver Foundation (ALF) reported. If symptoms appear, a patient may experience “fatigue, weakness, weight loss, loss of appetite, nausea,

abdominal pain, spider-like blood vessels, yellowing of the skin and eyes (jaundice), itching, fluid buildup and swelling of the legs (edema) and abdomen (ascites), and mental confusion,” the ALF added.

As more healthcare providers focus their attention on diagnosing and treating this potentially deadly disease, clinical laboratories and anatomical pathology groups will likely see an uptick in tests ordered by doctors moving from initial diagnoses to more detailed testing and eventually to treatment follow ups.

—Kristin Althea O’Connor

Related Information:

Fatty Liver Disease Now Affects Four in 10 US Adults

More than 40% of US Adults Have Liver Disease, with Higher Risk among Hispanics, New Study Finds

Disparities in Steatosis Prevalence in the United States by Race or Ethnicity According to the 2023 Criteria

Metabolic Dysfunction-Associated Steatotic Liver Disease (MASLD)

Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease

Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD)

Consumers Increasingly Purchase Medical Laboratory Self-Test Kits for Blood Glucose, Cholesterol, and Colon Cancer Screening, according to Consumer Reports

The self-monitoring/self-test market is expected to swell to $19 billion by 2019, offering opportunities for pathologists and clinical laboratories to advise patients and ensure the proper use of home tests

Might the future of clinical laboratory tests be sitting on the shelf at your corner pharmacy right now? Patient self-testing and screening kits continue to garner the approvals of Consumer Reports’ medical advisors.

That’s happening because the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) continues to clear many do-it-yourself tests that traditionally were performed in medical laboratories by qualified personnel, much to the chagrin of some doctors.

Empowered healthcare consumers are checking their cholesterol, monitoring their diabetes, and more, using health screening kits that range from $8 to $175, according to a Consumer Reports on Health article, which advised consumers to use self-tests judiciously and share the results with their physicians. (more…)

Why Healthcare Experts Critical of Direct Access Testing Advise Clinical Laboratories to Take Precautions

Test ordering and results interpretation can confuse the public says Dartmouth Institute, which is why some clinical laboratories limit the types of lab tests that people can request

Giving consumers direct access to medical laboratory testing continues to be a subject of some controversy. One factor in this debate is Theranos, which brought much attention to direct access testing, followed by extensive news coverage in recent months of its problems with reporting accurate clinical laboratory test results.

Concerns about allowing consumers to have direct access to lab testing were the subject of a recent National Public Radio (NPR) Shots Health News story. Several medical experts were interviewed and described why they had concerns about direct access testing (DAT).

One such expert is H. Gilbert Welch, MD, MPH, Professor of Medicine, Community and Family Medicine at The Dartmouth Institute (Dartmouth). According to Welch, DAT could contribute to over-diagnosis and give people an inaccurate impression of what good health actually means. (more…)

Researchers at Howard Hughes Medical Institute Develop Blood Test That Reveals a Patient’s Viral History; Could Reduce Unnecessary Clinical Laboratory Testing

The VirScan test gives doctors insight into a patient’s lifetime exposure to viruses and thus may be developed into a useful medical laboratory test

Scientists and pathologists are learning that blood is like a time capsule, holding precious information about exposure to viruses over the years—chickenpox at five, mononucleosis at 18, flu at 40. You get the idea.

Now, researchers at Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI)  have found a way to tap that entire data stream, so to speak. An inexpensive blood test, they say, reveals every virus that has passed through the body over time.

New Discoveries Could Lead to a Useful Clinical Laboratory Test

The testing method, called VirScan by researchers, is an efficient alternative to current medical laboratory tests that test for specific viruses one at a time, according to an HHMI news statement about the new technology. (more…)

;