Optimizing patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease pre-transplant

Can Liver J. 2020 Aug 20;3(3):237-250. doi: 10.3138/canlivj-2019-0025. eCollection 2020 Summer.

Abstract

Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the most common cause of chronic liver disease in Western countries. Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), which is the progressive counterpart of the disease, is becoming the leading indication for liver transplantation in North America. Owing to the lack of symptoms, NASH is often an incidental diagnosis, resulting in a significant proportion of patients being diagnosed when advanced liver disease has already developed. NAFLD has recently been characterized as the hepatic manifestation of metabolic syndrome. Consequently, it is a multisystem disease that often co-exists with several other conditions, such as obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, and extra-hepatic malignancy, which have an impact on selection of transplant recipients. The complexity of diagnostic approach, need for multidisciplinary clinical management, and lack of a specific treatment further complicate the picture of this extremely prevalent liver condition. NAFLD patients with advanced liver disease should be considered for early referral to liver transplant clinics for careful metabolic and cardiovascular risk stratification because they have worse survival rates after liver transplantation than other patients with chronic liver disease. Early referral will also facilitate optimization of metabolic comorbidities before proceeding with transplantation. This review provides an overview of strategies to identify patients with advanced NAFLD, with an emphasis on the management of associated comorbidities and optimal timing of pre-transplant evaluation. Other topics that have been shown to affect recipient optimization, such as the role of lifestyle changes and bariatric surgery in the management of obesity, as well as sarcopenia in decompensated NASH-related cirrhosis, are addressed.

Keywords: cardiovascular risk; metabolic comorbidities; nonalcoholic fatty liver disease; obesity treatment; pre-transplant; referral.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

Funding: GS is supported by a Junior 1 and 2 Salary Award from Fonds de la Recherche du Quebéc en Santé (nos. 27127 and 267806) and research salary from the Department of Medicine, McGill University.