High prevalence of diabetes among young First Nations Peoples with metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease: a population-based study in Australia
Patricia C. Valery, Shruti Roche, Catherine Brown, James O’Beirne, Gunter Hartel, Barbara Leggett, Richard Skoien, Elizabeth E. Powell

TL;DR
Young First Nations Australians with liver disease have a high rate of diabetes, which could worsen their liver health and mortality.
Contribution
First population-based study on metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) in First Nations Australians, revealing high diabetes prevalence.
Findings
First Nations Peoples with MASLD had a significantly higher prevalence of diabetes compared to non-Indigenous Australians (43.5% vs. 30.8%).
Despite higher comorbidities, Indigenous status was not associated with progression to decompensated cirrhosis or survival.
The study highlights the need for early identification and culturally appropriate interventions for MASLD in First Nations communities.
Abstract
Liver disease is an important contributor to the mortality gap between First Nations Peoples and non-Indigenous Australian adults. Despite a high burden of metabolic comorbidities among First Nations Peoples, data about the epidemiology of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) in this population is scarce. A retrospective analysis of all adults hospitalized with MASLD or metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) with/without cirrhosis during 2007–2019 in the state of Queensland was performed. Patients were followed from the first admission with MASLD/MASH (identified based on validated algorithms) to decompensated cirrhosis and overall mortality. We explored differences according to Indigenous status using Multivariable Cox regression. 439 First Nations Peoples and 7,547 non-Indigenous Australians were followed for a median of 4.6 years…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLiver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment · Liver Disease and Transplantation · Liver Diseases and Immunity
