TY - JOUR
T1 - National study of NAFLD management identifies variation in delivery of care in the UK between 2019 to 2022
AU - Li, Wenhao
AU - Sheridan, David
AU - McPherson, Stuart
AU - Alazawi, William
AU - Abeysekera, Kush
AU - Marjot, Tom
AU - Brennan, Paul
AU - Mahgoub, Sara
AU - Cacciottolo, Tessa
AU - Hydes, Theresa
AU - Hardy, Tim
AU - McGinty, Gio
AU - Tavabie, Oliver
AU - Cathcart, Jennifer
AU - Premathilaka, Chirantha
AU - Mukhopadhya, Ashis
AU - Bhat, Arshiya
AU - Begum, Shahnaz
AU - Abushaban, Bashar
AU - Bhuva, Meha
AU - Sinclair, Sophie
AU - Leith, Damien
AU - McCulloch, Cullen
AU - Leithead, Joanna
AU - Fox, Richard
AU - Shah, Muhammad Haris
AU - Campbell, Eugene
AU - Brown, Edward
AU - Mansour, Dina
AU - Shah, Fatma
AU - Allison, Michael
AU - Chan, Jonathan
AU - Roberts, Victoria
AU - Appanna, Gautham
AU - Mandour, Mandour Omer
AU - Slee, Georgina
AU - Wong, Vicki
AU - Kotha, Sreelakshmi
AU - Pekarska, Katrina
AU - Parker, Richard
AU - Sieberhagen, Cyril
AU - Ngan, Thomas
AU - Asilmaz, Esra
AU - Miller, Hamish
AU - Cobbold, Jeremy
AU - Crocombe, Dom
AU - Tsochatzis, Manolis
AU - Tanwar, Sudeep
AU - Dias, Aruna
AU - Singh, Gurmit
AU - Agrawal, Swastik
AU - Chhabra, Puneet
AU - Gurung, Amrita
AU - Veettil, Rajesh
AU - Abeles, Robin Daniel
AU - Chatterjee, Devnandan
AU - Carbonell, Michael
AU - Mohamed, Zameer
AU - El-Sayed, Ahmed
AU - Johnson, Amy
AU - Barclay, Stephen
AU - Kelly, Katherine
AU - Munonye, Joshua
AU - Coates, Dominic
AU - Bamidele, Opeyemi
AU - Johnston, Thomas
AU - Samuel, David
AU - Ball, Belinda
AU - Arscott-Samuel, Rebecca
AU - Hams, Pamela
AU - Armstrong, Matthew
AU - Elkhol, Ayman
AU - Shailesh, Karanth
AU - Bains, Vikram
AU - Manousou, Pinelopi
AU - Gupta, Tarun
AU - Than, Sophia
AU - Unitt, Esther
AU - Gordon, Victoria
AU - Wakefield, Alice
AU - Gilchrist, Sian
AU - Cozma, Ioana
AU - Saeed, Sohaib
AU - Umrani, Salman
AU - Olsen, Kathryn
N1 - © 2023 Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL)
PY - 2023/12
Y1 - 2023/12
N2 - Background & Aims: Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is associated with liver and cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Recently published NAFLD Quality Standards include 11 key performance indicators (KPIs) of good clinical care. This national study, endorsed by British Association for the Study of the Liver (BASL) and British Society of Gastroenterology (BSG), aimed to benchmark NAFLD care in UK hospitals against these KPIs. Methods: This study included all new patients with NAFLD reviewed in the outpatient clinic in the months of March 2019 and March 2022. Participating UK hospitals self-registered for the study through BASL/BSG. KPI outcomes were compared using Fisher's exact or Chi-square tests. Results: Data from 776 patients with NAFLD attending 34 hospitals (England [25], Scotland [four], Wales [three], Northern Ireland [two]) were collected. A total of 85.3% of hospitals reported established local liver disease assessment pathways, yet only 27.9% of patients with suspected NAFLD had non-invasive fibrosis assessment documented at the point of referral to secondary care. In secondary care, 79.1% of patients had fibrosis assessment. Assessment of cardiometabolic risk factors including obesity, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and smoking were conducted in 73.2%, 33.0%, 19.3%, and 54.9% of all patients, respectively. There was limited documentation of diet (35.7%) and exercise advice (55.1%). Excluding those on statins, only 9.1% of patients with NAFLD at increased cardiovascular risk (T2DM and/or QRISK-3 >10%) had documented discussion of statin treatment. Significant KPI improvements from 2019 to 2022 were evident in use of non-invasive fibrosis assessment before secondary care referral, statin recommendations, and diet and exercise recommendations. Conclusions: This national study identified substantial variation in NAFLD management in the UK with clear areas for improvement, particularly fibrosis risk assessment before secondary care referral and management of associated cardiometabolic risk factors. Impact and implications: This study identified significant variation in the management of NAFLD in the UK. Only 27.9% of patients with suspected NAFLD had non-invasive fibrosis assessment performed to identify those at greater risk of advanced liver disease before specialist referral. Greater emphasis is needed on the management of associated cardiometabolic risk factors in individuals with NAFLD. Hospitals with multidisciplinary NAFLD service provision had higher rates of fibrosis evaluation and assessment and management of cardiometabolic risk than hospitals without multidisciplinary services. Further work is needed to align guideline recommendations and real-world practice in NAFLD care.
AB - Background & Aims: Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is associated with liver and cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Recently published NAFLD Quality Standards include 11 key performance indicators (KPIs) of good clinical care. This national study, endorsed by British Association for the Study of the Liver (BASL) and British Society of Gastroenterology (BSG), aimed to benchmark NAFLD care in UK hospitals against these KPIs. Methods: This study included all new patients with NAFLD reviewed in the outpatient clinic in the months of March 2019 and March 2022. Participating UK hospitals self-registered for the study through BASL/BSG. KPI outcomes were compared using Fisher's exact or Chi-square tests. Results: Data from 776 patients with NAFLD attending 34 hospitals (England [25], Scotland [four], Wales [three], Northern Ireland [two]) were collected. A total of 85.3% of hospitals reported established local liver disease assessment pathways, yet only 27.9% of patients with suspected NAFLD had non-invasive fibrosis assessment documented at the point of referral to secondary care. In secondary care, 79.1% of patients had fibrosis assessment. Assessment of cardiometabolic risk factors including obesity, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and smoking were conducted in 73.2%, 33.0%, 19.3%, and 54.9% of all patients, respectively. There was limited documentation of diet (35.7%) and exercise advice (55.1%). Excluding those on statins, only 9.1% of patients with NAFLD at increased cardiovascular risk (T2DM and/or QRISK-3 >10%) had documented discussion of statin treatment. Significant KPI improvements from 2019 to 2022 were evident in use of non-invasive fibrosis assessment before secondary care referral, statin recommendations, and diet and exercise recommendations. Conclusions: This national study identified substantial variation in NAFLD management in the UK with clear areas for improvement, particularly fibrosis risk assessment before secondary care referral and management of associated cardiometabolic risk factors. Impact and implications: This study identified significant variation in the management of NAFLD in the UK. Only 27.9% of patients with suspected NAFLD had non-invasive fibrosis assessment performed to identify those at greater risk of advanced liver disease before specialist referral. Greater emphasis is needed on the management of associated cardiometabolic risk factors in individuals with NAFLD. Hospitals with multidisciplinary NAFLD service provision had higher rates of fibrosis evaluation and assessment and management of cardiometabolic risk than hospitals without multidisciplinary services. Further work is needed to align guideline recommendations and real-world practice in NAFLD care.
KW - Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease
KW - Quality of care
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85175694003&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jhepr.2023.100897
DO - 10.1016/j.jhepr.2023.100897
M3 - Article
C2 - 38023607
AN - SCOPUS:85175694003
SN - 2589-5559
VL - 5
JO - JHEP Reports
JF - JHEP Reports
IS - 12
M1 - 100897
ER -