Abstract

BackgroundDriven by alcohol consumption and obesity, the prevalence of non-viral liver disease in the UK is increasing. Due to its silent and slow nature, the progression of liver disease is currently unpredictable and challenging to monitor. The latest National Institute for Health Care Excellence cirrhosis guidelines call for a validated risk tool that would allow general practitioners to identify patients that are at high risk of developing cirrhosis.MethodsUsing linked electronic health records from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink (a database of > 10 million patients in England), we aim to develop and validate a prediction model to estimate 2-, 5- and 10-year risk of cirrhosis. The model will provide individualised cirrhosis risk predictions for adult primary care patients, free from underlying liver disease or viral hepatitis infection, whose liver blood test results come back abnormal. We will externally validate the model in patients from 30 further Clinical Practice Research Datalink general practices in England.DiscussionThe prediction model will provide estimates of cirrhosis risk in primary care patients with abnormal liver blood test results to guide referral to secondary care, to identify patients who are in serious need of preventative health interventions and to help reassure patients at low risk of cirrhosis in the long term.

Highlights

  • Driven by alcohol consumption and obesity, the prevalence of non-viral liver disease in the UK is increasing

  • Liver disease is often asymptomatic and its presence unknown to the patient until the liver function becomes so severely compromised that the patient develops life-threatening complications such as gastrointestinal bleeding, jaundice and abdominal infections

  • The latest National Institute for Health Care Excellence (NICE) guideline for assessment and management of cirrhosis calls for a validated risk tool that would allow general practitioners (GPs) to identify patients who are at high risk of developing cirrhosis [4]

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Summary

Introduction

Driven by alcohol consumption and obesity, the prevalence of non-viral liver disease in the UK is increasing. Due to its silent and slow nature, the progression of liver disease is currently unpredictable and challenging to monitor. The latest National Institute for Health Care Excellence cirrhosis guidelines call for a validated risk tool that would allow general practitioners to identify patients that are at high risk of developing cirrhosis. Due to its silent and slow nature, the progression of liver disease is currently unpredictable and challenging to monitor and identifying the target population for these interventions is currently not possible. The latest National Institute for Health Care Excellence (NICE) guideline for assessment and management of cirrhosis calls for a validated risk tool that would allow general practitioners (GPs) to identify patients who are at high risk of developing cirrhosis [4]

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