Issue: March 2024
Fact checked byRichard Smith

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February 05, 2024
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Noninvasive tests may fail to detect liver fibrosis, especially among Black adults

Issue: March 2024
Fact checked byRichard Smith
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Key takeaways:

  • Noninvasive tests for liver fibrosis screening performed worse among Black adults vs. other racial-ethnic groups.
  • Using the fibrosis-4 index first to screen cirrhosis may lead to providers missing 48% of cases.

Vibration-controlled transient elastography and serum-based noninvasive tests show a significant discrepancy in detecting liver fibrosis, according to study findings published in Obesity.

“The fibrosis-4 (FIB-4) index performs poorly overall to screen the general population with cardiometabolic risk factors for significant liver fibrosis when compared to vibration-controlled transient elastography,” Meagan Gray, MD, assistant professor in the division of gastroenterology and hepatology, department of medicine, at University of Alabama at Birmingham, told Healio. “Furthermore, differences in performance across different racial and ethnic groups may continue to promote health disparities.”

Meagan Gray, MD

Researchers obtained data from 6,359 adults who participated in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey from 2017 to 2020 and had blood samples collected and a vibration-controlled transient elastography performed at the same appointment. Adults were considered to have metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), which is the new nomenclature replacing nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), if they had a controlled attenuation parameter of 288 dB/m or more and at least one cardiometabolic risk factor. Advanced fibrosis was defined as a liver stiffness of 9.7 kilopascal (kPa) or higher and cirrhosis was liver stiffness of 13.6 kPa or more. Anthropometric and laboratory measurements were used to calculate noninvasive test scores, including the FIB-4 index, NAFLD fibrosis score and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) to platelet ratio index. NAFLD liver fat score and fatty liver index were also calculated for all participants to estimate hepatic steatosis.

MASLD rates varied by race and ethnicity, with 42% of Hispanic adults having MASLD compared with 36.8% of white adults, 30.1% of Asian adults and 26% of Black adults. Black and Asian adults also had the lowest levels of advanced liver fibrosis and cirrhosis among racial-ethnic groups.

Racial-ethnic disparities with noninvasive tests

Fatty liver index and NAFLD liver fat score overestimated hepatic steatosis compared with controlled attenuation parameter results in all racial-ethnic groups. The overall agreement between fatty liver index and controlled attenuation parameter results for diagnosing hepatic steatosis was 73.4% and NAFLD liver fat score agreed with controlled attenuation parameter results 73.2% of the time.

The three noninvasive tests to estimate liver fibrosis performed poorly at detecting advanced liver fibrosis. NAFLD fibrosis score outperformed FIB-4 index and AST to platelet ratio index. FIB-4 index and AST to platelet ratio index performed worse among Black adults than other racial-ethnic groups.

For predicting cirrhosis, NAFLD fibrosis score performed slightly better than the other two noninvasive tests. All three scores performed worse at predicting cirrhosis among Black adults compared with other racial ethnic groups. FIB-4 index and AST to platelet ratio index performed worse the NAFLD fibrosis score for predicting advanced fibrosis and cirrhosis among Black adults vs. other racial-ethnic groups.

Fernando Bril

“There is substantial evidence that race and ethnicity affect the development and progression of MASLD,” Fernando Bril, MD, assistant professor in the division of endocrinology, diabetes and metabolism, department of medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, told Healio. “However, despite this well-accepted fact, none of the noninvasive tests include race or ethnicity as a covariable in their calculation. Our results suggest that we may need to move toward including this information when noninvasively assessing the risk of liver fibrosis. This will allow us to improve the performance of these scores and make them more generalizable, similar to what happens with other formulas commonly used in clinical practice, such as estimated glomerular filtration rate.”

FIB-4 index misses fibrosis, cirrhosis cases

Of the study group, 78.7% were considered at-risk of liver disease based on having prediabetes, type 2 diabetes, elevated liver enzymes or at least two cardiometabolic risk factors. Noninvasive tests performed similarly among adults at risk for liver disease as they did with the full study group.

If sequential testing were performed with vibration-controlled transient elastography only conducted for adults with a FIB-4 index score of 1.3 or higher, providers would miss 56% of adults with advanced fibrosis and 48% of those with cirrhosis.

“We suspected that the FIB-4 results would vary across race and ethnicities, but did not expect such poor performance of the FIB-4 across all patients,” Gray said. “This test is now being widely recommended as a first-line screening test for liver fibrosis for patients in primary care clinics. The results are worrisome that we may be missing many patients with significant liver disease by using this as the initial screening test of choice.”

Bril said researchers need to examine developing new noninvasive tests or modifying old ones to include race and ethnicity as a covariate.

“It will be important to do this in studies that have histology as the gold standard,” Bril said.

For more information:

Fernando Bril, MD, can be reached at fbril@uab.edu.

Meagan Gray, MD, can be reached at meaganegray@uabmc.edu.