Pennisi, et al. One-year Changes in Liver Stiffness Measurement, but not in Alanine Aminotransferase and Controlled Attenuation Parameter, Predict Long-term Liver Outcomes in Patients with Metabolic Dysfunction-associated Steatotic Liver Disease.
With new drug treatments emerging for MASLD, there is an urgent clinical need for simple, widely available, non-invasive tools that can identify patients at risk of disease progression and monitor their response to therapy. This study evaluated whether 1-year changes in FibroScan®-derived data: liver stiffness measurement (LSM) and controlled attenuation parameter (CAP), alongside FIB-4 and serum ALT, can predict liver-related outcomes in patients with MASLD and serve as practical non-invasive tools to guide and monitor pharmacological treatment decisions.
This multicenter retrospective cohort study enrolled MASLD patients between June 2008 and March 2023 across 16 centers in America, Europe, and Asia, including 1,744 patients with LSM ≥8 kPa and 989 with LSM ≥10 kPa, followed for a median of 28.2 and 32 months respectively. Liver-related events (LREs), including hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and liver decompensation (LD), were prospectively recorded, and LSM, CAP, ALT, and FIB-4 were assessed at both baseline and 1-year follow-up.
Serial liver stiffness measurements by FibroScan® device prove that what happens to liver stiffness at 1 year determines what happens to the liver over the long term — a 1-year reduction in LSM cuts the risk of liver-related events by 47% and liver decompensation by 57%, while increases predict progressively worse outcomes. As new MASLD drugs enter the market, this positions FibroScan® as the go-to non-invasive tool to monitor treatment response and guide the clinical decisions.