The quiet case for making liver fibrosis screening part of every diabetologist’s routine.

Jorn Schattenberg

(…) the good news is that identifying risk doesn’t have to add complexity. Tools like FIB-4—a simple, non-invasive fibrosis risk estimate based on standard blood tests—can help flag high-risk patients early.

– Jörn M Schattenberg, Co-director of the Global Think-Tank on Steatotic Liver Disease

Millions of people with type 2 diabetes are silently developing advanced liver disease—and many care teams don’t even know it. Despite growing awareness of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), screening for advanced liver fibrosis  still is not a routine part of diabetes care. And yet, the overlap is undeniable: most people living with type 2 diabetes have MASLD.

It’s understandable that liver health doesn’t always make it into the routine checklist of diabetes care. Diabetologists are managing a wide spectrum of risks—cardiovascular, renal, metabolic—often under real time and system pressures. Liver health may feel like an adjacent issue, important but outside the core remit. But for people living with type 2 diabetes, it’s far from peripheral. MASLD can quietly progress for years, and by the time symptoms appear, it may already be advanced and reaching the stage of cirrhosis.

The good news is that identifying risk doesn’t have to add complexity. Tools like FIB-4—a simple, non-invasive fibrosis risk estimate based on standard blood tests—can help flag high-risk patients early. In many cases, the necessary data are already part of routine labs. With clear referral pathways in place, screening for liver disease can become a small adjustment rather than a major shift—one that fits into existing workflows and ultimately supports better long-term outcomes.

Several national and international guidelines now recommend fibrosis risk assessment in people with type 2 diabetes. The clinical evidence is there. So are the diagnostic tests and technology. What’s needed now is consistency. Integrating liver fibrosis screening in diabetes care isn’t about shifting more responsibility onto one specialty—it’s about supporting the clinicians who already do so much, with practical tools that help close an important health gap.

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