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| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| Maag Lever Darm Stichting | OTHER |
| Radboud University Medical Center | OTHER |
| Leiden University Medical Center | OTHER |
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Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a liver disease, caused by storage of fat in the liver. The most-important risk-factors are being overweight, and disorders in sugar and cholesterol handling of the body. On average does around 30% of the population worldwide have any signs of fatty liver. Most people will not get severe complaints as a result of their fatty liver. But in some of them, the fat storage will lead to hepatitis. This causes damage to the liver which can eventually lead to scarring of the liver, and in some patients to cirrhosis. This possibly can cause liver failure, liver cancer, an several complaints which reduce the quality of life. There are several tests which can help in detecting scarring of the liver. However, the scientific world still does not know well enough which test works best and if they perhaps might work better if they are used together. In this study these questions will be investigated in order to design a care path which does several tests consecutively. The goal is that this will make it possible to easily detect a severely diseased liver and that this will eventually help to detect patients earlier so they can be treated earlier and complications of the disease might be reduced. Moreover, is the goal that this study will lead to a decrease in unnecessary referrals to a hepatologist, resulting in a reduction in invasive diagnostic interventions. Hospital specialists who think that their patient might be at risk for advanced liver disease, can refer a patient to this study. Participants will go to the hospital for one study visit where several tests will be done which are designed to detect liver scarring. Depending on the results, a participant will be referred to a hepatologist for more extensive diagnostics or referred back to the referring specialist with advice for management of the disease.
Background of the study:
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a disease of alarmingly increasing prevalence. Progression along the NAFLD spectrum often goes unnoticed since it is often asymptomatic. Awareness among health care workers and implementation of care paths to detect progressing NAFLD stages are limited. Without clear guidance papers or robust care pathways for risk stratification, the current diagnostic approach for NAFLD is highly variable, leading to both underdiagnosis of advanced stages of disease, andunnecessary referrals for mild stages of disease. This calls for a comprehensive care path consisting of non-invasive alternatives to detect those patients with severe cases of NAFLD. Particularly the use of a sequential, two-tiered care path algorithm is promising as it has the ability to detect underlying advanced cases of fibrosis, and has previously been shown to be cost-effective. This was shown by dr. Ankur Srivastava, who designed a pathway consisting of FIB4-score and ELF-test that led to a reduction of unnecessary referrals to the hepatologist by 80%, whilst improving the detection of advanced fibrosis and cirrhosis 5- and 3-fold,respectively (8). In this study the investigation of several two-tiered sequential care path algorithms, comprised of the FIB4-score, VCTE and the ELF-test, for the detection of advanced stages of NAFLD-fibrosis is proposed: the Nijmegen-Leiden-AmsterdamNAFLD-NASH 2-tiered care path study: NLA2-study.
Objective of the study:
The aim of the study is to improve case finding of advanced cases of NAFLD (≥F3 fibrosis), whilst simultaneously reducing unnecessary referrals for mild cases (\
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prospective care path arm | Participants who enter the care path will make up the prospective care path arm. In patients entering the care path three diagnostic tests for liver fibrosis will be performed. FIB4-score, Vibration controlled transient elastography and Enhanced Liver Fibrosis test |
| |
| Prospective arm of 'regular care' | Patients who are referred to the hepatologist in participating centers during the study period without using the care path (e.g. because of altered liver function tests for instance), will be the prospective 'regular care' arm | ||
| Retrospective arm of 'regular care' | The investigators will do an data extraction of the electronic health records of patients referred to the hepatologist in the five years prior to the study. They will make up the retrospective comparative arm of regular care |
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FIB4-score | Diagnostic Test | A score which estimates the risk for advanced liver fibrosis, based on: age, ALT, AST and thrombocytes |
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| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Diagnostic accuracy of the three different care paths to detect advanced fibrosis. | The diagnostic accuracy of the three different sequential care path algorithms to detect underlying advanced (≥F3) liver fibrosis, assessed using sensitivity, specificity, predictive values and area under the receiver characteristics (AUROC) curve | The time frame is based on the time between the study visit and the subsequent read-outs of the EHR, up to 24 months later |
| Diagnostic performance of the three different care paths to increase correct and decrease incorrect referrals. | The diagnostic performance of the three different sequential care path algorithms, defined as the increase in correct and the decrease in unnecessary referrals when using these care paths to detect underlying advanced (≥F3) NAFLD-fibrosis compared to regular care. | The time frame is based on the time between the study visit and the subsequent read-outs of the EHR, up to 24 months later |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Cost effectiveness of the different diagnostic modalities/care path algorithms | The cost effectiveness of the different diagnostic modalities/care path algorithms compared to each other and to regular care. | The time frame is based on the time between the study visit and the subsequent read-outs of the EHR, up to 24 months later. |
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Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
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Patients will be recruited from three different academic medical centres in the Netherlands, namely Radboudumc, LUMC and Amsterdam UMC. Patients who are suspected of underlying severe NAFLD-fibrosis by their treating physician are eligible for inclusion in the study. This suspection will most often arise because of risk factors as obesity, diabetes type 2, hypercholesterolemia or metabolic syndrome, or proven heaptic steatosis because of an conventional ultrasound. Patients are referred from hospital specialists
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| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Onno Holleboom, MD PhD | Amsterdam UMC, location AMC | Principal Investigator |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Radboudumc | Nijmegen | Gelderland | 6525 GA | Netherlands | ||
| Amsterdam UMC, location AMC |
| PubMed Identifier | Type | Citation | Retractions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 31630897 | Background | Stols-Goncalves D, Hovingh GK, Nieuwdorp M, Holleboom AG. NAFLD and Atherosclerosis: Two Sides of the Same Dysmetabolic Coin? Trends Endocrinol Metab. 2019 Dec;30(12):891-902. doi: 10.1016/j.tem.2019.08.008. Epub 2019 Oct 17. | |
| 32267638 | Background | Tushuizen ME, Holleboom AG, Koot BGP, Blokzijl H, van Mil SWC, Koek GH. [Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease; a full-bodied epidemic]. Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd. 2020 Feb 27;164:D4096. Dutch. |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D065626 | Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D005234 | Fatty Liver |
| D008107 | Liver Diseases |
| D004066 | Digestive System Diseases |
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Serum of the participants will be retained if they give permission for that. buffy coats will be stored as well, for future DNA research.
| Vibration controlled transient elastography | Diagnostic Test | VCTE measures the speed of a mechanically generated shear wave across the liver to derive a liver stiffness measurement (LSM), a marker of hepatic fibrosis |
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| Enhanced Liver Fibrosis test | Diagnostic Test | The ELF-test is a non-invasive blood test that measures three direct markers of liver fibrosis: hyaluronic acid (HA), procollagen III amino-terminal peptide (PIIINP), and tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinase 1 (TIMP-1). |
|
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| Number of patients coded for NAFLD before and after the study |
Number of patients coded for NAFLD by physicians before and after initiation of the NLA2 study (measure of awareness) |
| through study completion, an average of 1 year |
| The diagnostic accuracy of the FIB4-score for detecting advanced fibrosis | The diagnostic accuracy of the FIB4-score for detecting underlying advanced (≥F3) liver fibrosis, using sensitivity, specificity, predictive values and AUROC-curves; | The time frame is based on the time between the study visit and the subsequent read-outs of the EHR, up to 24 months later. |
| The diagnostic accuracy of the ELF-test for detecting advanced fibrosis | The diagnostic accuracy of the ELF-test for detecting underlying advanced (≥F3) liver fibrosis, using sensitivity, specificity, predictive values and AUROC-curves; | The time frame is based on the time between the study visit and the subsequent read-outs of the EHR, up to 24 months later. |
| The diagnostic accuracy of VCTE for detecting advanced fibrosis | The diagnostic accuracy of VCTE for detecting underlying advanced (≥F3) liver fibrosis, using sensitivity, specificity, predictive values and AUROC-curves; | The time frame is based on the time between the study visit and the subsequent read-outs of the EHR, up to 24 months later. |
| Diagnostic performance of the FIB4-score to increase correct and decrease incorrect referrals. | The diagnostic performance of the FIB4-score, defined as the increase in correct and the decrease in unnecessary referrals when using this test to detect underlying advanced (≥F3) NAFLD-fibrosis compared to regular care. | The time frame is based on the time between the study visit and the subsequent read-outs of the EHR, up to 24 months later. |
| Diagnostic performance of VCTE to increase correct and decrease incorrect referrals. | The diagnostic performance of VCTE, defined as the increase in correct and the decrease in unnecessary referrals when using this test to detect underlying advanced (≥F3) NAFLD-fibrosis compared to regular care. | The time frame is based on the time between the study visit and the subsequent read-outs of the EHR, up to 24 months later. |
| Diagnostic performance of the ELF-test to increase correct and decrease incorrect referrals. | The diagnostic performance of the ELF-test, defined as the increase in correct and the decrease in unnecessary referrals when using this test to detect underlying advanced (≥F3) NAFLD-fibrosis compared to regular care. | The time frame is based on the time between the study visit and the subsequent read-outs of the EHR, up to 24 months later. |
| Amsterdam |
| North Holland |
| 1105AZ |
| Netherlands |
| Leiden universitair medisch centrum | Leiden | South Holland | 2333 ZA | Netherlands |
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