| Literature DB >> 33045403 |
Timothy Hardy1, Kristy Wonders2, Ramy Younes3, Guruprasad P Aithal4, Rocio Aller5, Michael Allison6, Pierre Bedossa2, Fay Betsou7, Jerome Boursier8, M Julia Brosnan9, Alastair Burt1, Jeremy Cobbold10, Helena Cortez-Pinto11, Chris P Day1, Jean-Francois Dufour12, Mattias Ekstedt13, Sven Francque14, Stephen Harrison15, Luca Miele16, Patrik Nasr13, George Papatheodoridis17, Salvatore Petta18, Dina Tiniakos19, Richard Torstenson20, Luca Valenti21, Adriaan G Holleboom22, Hannele Yki-Jarvinen23, Andreas Geier24, Manuel Romero-Gomez25, Vlad Ratziu26, Elisabetta Bugianesi27, Jörn M Schattenberg28, Quentin M Anstee29.
Abstract
Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD), a progressive liver disease that is closely associated with obesity, type 2 diabetes, hypertension and dyslipidaemia, represents an increasing global public health challenge. There is significant variability in the disease course: the majority exhibit only fat accumulation in the liver but a significant minority develop a necroinflammatory form of the disease (non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, NASH) that may progress to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. At present our understanding of pathogenesis, disease natural history and long-term outcomes remain incomplete. There is a need for large, well characterised patient cohorts that may be used to address these knowledge gaps and to support the development of better biomarkers and novel therapies. The European NAFLD Registry is an international, prospectively recruited observational cohort study that aims to establish a large, highly-phenotyped patient cohort and linked bioresource. Here we describe the infrastructure, data management and monitoring plans, and the standard operating procedures implemented to ensure the timely and systematic collection of high-quality data and samples. Already recruiting subjects at secondary/tertiary care centres across Europe, the Registry is supporting the European Union IMI2-funded LITMUS 'Liver Investigation: Testing Marker Utility in Steatohepatitis' consortium, which is a major international effort to robustly validate biomarkers that diagnose, risk stratify and/or monitor NAFLD progression and liver fibrosis stage. The European NAFLD Registry has the demonstrable capacity to support research and biomarker development at scale and pace.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarker; Cirrhosis; NAFLD; NASH
Year: 2020 PMID: 33045403 DOI: 10.1016/j.cct.2020.106175
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Contemp Clin Trials ISSN: 1551-7144 Impact factor: 2.226