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Evolving models of care in patients with metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease, recognising its population burden and the impact of metabolic dysfunction on incident rates of hepatic and extra-hepatic outcomes

Evolving models of care in patients with metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease, recognising its population burden and the impact of metabolic dysfunction on incident rates of hepatic and extra-hepatic outcomes
Evolving models of care in patients with metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease, recognising its population burden and the impact of metabolic dysfunction on incident rates of hepatic and extra-hepatic outcomes
Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) is associated with any one of five principal traits of the metabolic syndrome. MASLD is characterised by multimorbidity with liver-related and extrahepatic complications including cardiovascular and cardiac disease, chronic kidney disease and certain extrahepatic cancers. While increasing liver fibrosis severity is well-established as a major contributor to the hepatic complications of MASLD, emerging evidence demonstrates that the severity of associated metabolic dysfunction significantly influences adverse extrahepatic clinical outcomes and all-cause mortality. Changing models of care are needed for patients with MASLD, extending the focus beyond that of liver health and optimising the inherent (heterogeneous) cardiometabolic dysfunction. Such an approach requires multi-stakeholder and community-based engagement with improved identification and diagnosis, and better patient and healthcare provider education that also focuses on type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and obesity, to ameliorate the consequences of this highly prevalent global multisystem disease.

Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease, genetic predisposition, liver fibrosis, major adverse liver outcomes, metabolic syndrome, multisystem disease, type 2 diabetes
1073-0842
Bilson, Josh
a99f9320-335c-47c8-bf30-07df48a5467d
Cuthbertson, Daniel J.
32709697-1c3a-40f0-bf6b-f2d52bb09626
Byrne, Chrisopher D.
1370b997-cead-4229-83a7-53301ed2a43c
Bilson, Josh
a99f9320-335c-47c8-bf30-07df48a5467d
Cuthbertson, Daniel J.
32709697-1c3a-40f0-bf6b-f2d52bb09626
Byrne, Chrisopher D.
1370b997-cead-4229-83a7-53301ed2a43c

Bilson, Josh, Cuthbertson, Daniel J. and Byrne, Chrisopher D. (2025) Evolving models of care in patients with metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease, recognising its population burden and the impact of metabolic dysfunction on incident rates of hepatic and extra-hepatic outcomes. Metabolism and Target Organ Damage, 5 (27), [27]. (doi:10.20517/mtod.2025.28).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) is associated with any one of five principal traits of the metabolic syndrome. MASLD is characterised by multimorbidity with liver-related and extrahepatic complications including cardiovascular and cardiac disease, chronic kidney disease and certain extrahepatic cancers. While increasing liver fibrosis severity is well-established as a major contributor to the hepatic complications of MASLD, emerging evidence demonstrates that the severity of associated metabolic dysfunction significantly influences adverse extrahepatic clinical outcomes and all-cause mortality. Changing models of care are needed for patients with MASLD, extending the focus beyond that of liver health and optimising the inherent (heterogeneous) cardiometabolic dysfunction. Such an approach requires multi-stakeholder and community-based engagement with improved identification and diagnosis, and better patient and healthcare provider education that also focuses on type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and obesity, to ameliorate the consequences of this highly prevalent global multisystem disease.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 21 May 2025
Published date: 29 May 2025
Keywords: Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease, genetic predisposition, liver fibrosis, major adverse liver outcomes, metabolic syndrome, multisystem disease, type 2 diabetes

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 502629
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502629
ISSN: 1073-0842
PURE UUID: ffc32723-46df-44e5-a908-e16f8f0552e7
ORCID for Josh Bilson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4665-3886
ORCID for Chrisopher D. Byrne: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6322-7753

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 02 Jul 2025 16:35
Last modified: 11 Oct 2025 02:19

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Contributors

Author: Josh Bilson ORCID iD
Author: Daniel J. Cuthbertson

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