Metabolic Dysfunction-associated Steatotic Liver Disease (MASLD) in Primary Care
Medical University of South Carolina
Summary
This proposal evaluates the implementation of a novel, non-interruptive, electronic health record alert for metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) fibrosis risk assessment in primary care patients with MASLD using a stepped wedge, cluster randomized design. This work will generate generalizable data to dramatically enhance MASLD management in primary care.
Description
Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD, formerly nonalcoholic fatty liver disease \[NAFLD\]) affects an estimated 1in 3 persons in the U.S., a prevalence expected to increase over the next decade. MASLD's rising prevalence and its association with diabetes and obesity make it a chronic disease well-suited for initial management by primary care providers (PCPs). PCPs can impact MASLD care by first detecting advanced fibrosis, which is the best predictor of cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma, and liver-related mortality in affected patients. Recently issued guidelines f…
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18+ years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- No
Patients Inclusion Criteria: * Patients with a diagnosis code for MASLD * Type 2 diabetes mellitus will Exclusion Criteria: * All patients with cirrhosis, complications of cirrhosis (e.g. portal hypertension, hepatic encephalopathy), hepatocellular carcinoma, or previous liver transplant will be excluded. * pregnant women. Clinicians Clinicians will also be study participants, as we will be surveying them for feedback on the MASLD fibrosis risk assessment intervention. The MUSC primary care network at last count employed 122 clinicians across the 27 primary care practices. Inclusion crit…
Interventions
- OtherEHR alert
Diagnoses of MASLD (based on ICD 9/10 code) in a patient's EHR history, visit, or problem list, will cue a non-interruptive alert to appear and prompt clinicians to use the integrated EPIC© FIB-4 calculation SmartPhrase. The tool displays the FIB-4 risk score, the advanced fibrosis risk, and the clinical guidance. LSM by ultrasound with elastography will be recommended for patients with FIB-4 \>1.3 (FIB-4 \>2.0 if age \>65) and the decision support will urge clinicians to order US with elastography through the SmartSet. LSM results will be documented in the EHR and categorized as low-risk MASLD (LSM \<8 kPa) or advanced fibrosis (LSM \>8 kPa). Results will be disseminated to the ordering PCPs and the patients. PCPs will receive information on patient counseling for MASLD, and the expanding roles of weight loss, reduced alcohol use, and exercise on disease management. PCPs will be encouraged to refer patients with advanced fibrosis to a hepatology specialist, in accordance with guidelines.
Location
- Medical University of South CarolinaCharleston, South Carolina