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Clinicians debate the usefulness of NAFLD name change


 

Acceding to ‘wokeness’

A sizable number of readers felt the name changes were motivated by a “woke” awareness.

“The effect of this new ‘woke’ clarity is ridiculous and simply not worth it! Can we justify the cost of this? Patients will have to learn all over again how to discuss their condition,” said one reader.

The reader continued, saying, “The Internet and social media freely use the term ‘fat’ – and despite not wanting to offend – there seems to be universal agreement that FAT, in certain conditions or places, is unhealthy and undesirable.

“Why is the medical community so afraid to tell it like it is? I might hurt your feelings, but I could save your life,” concluded the reader.

Defending change

One commentator, a hepatologist in France, defended the changes and responded to some of complaints.

“Maybe people who comment here should read the article, reflect, and understand the reasons why the old nomenclature and definition were scientifically inaccurate and needed to be changed,” the commentator wrote.

“It was an exclusionary, negative definition not recognizing the root of the disease (adipose tissue dysfunction with insulin resistance – instead defining it by what it is not ...) and not allowing the recognition of a large segment of the population [that] accumulates metabolic risk factors and moderate alcohol consumption. These patients were left out of all studies. Those were the main reasons for change and not the stigma part – with the word ‘fatty’ only being an issue in English-speaking countries, not elsewhere,” the commentator continued.

“Calls for change have been voiced for 20 years and a first comprehensive attempt (called MAFLD) was introduced 3 years ago (J Hepatol. 2020;73:202-9). Please, a little bit of respect and restraint in the comments recognizing the research efforts and publications for those that contributed to the field over the past 25 years ...” the hepatologist wrote.

The reader added, “Clinicians and researchers were dissatisfied for a long time, but it took years to gather overwhelming evidence demonstrating what causes the disease and then to kickstart a process under the auspices of several multinational scientific societies and come up with something consensually agreed upon by a large number of clinician researchers.

“Now you can tell your patient that he has metabolic liver disease instead of telling him that the problem at the root of his disease is that he is not drinking alcohol (nonalcoholic steatohepatitis). So, again, it is not so much about changing a name but about redefining diagnostic criteria and a nosological framework,” the reader wrote.

Other readers responded to the defender:

“This nomenclature issue has been churned for 20+ years? Well, the mountain has labored heavily, and given birth to a mouse,” one said.

“Still, how is this going to help in the clinical management? The whole gamut of conditions are evaluated and treated as a whole, not in isolation,” a general practitioner in India said. “If someone has a risk factor or not, continuous follow-up is required as a whole, whether it’s nonalcoholic or alcoholic, or whatever term is coined up.”

Finally, a family physician said, “It just rolls off the tongue, doesn’t it? But I have to admit, it’s the one place where ‘persons’ from 56 countries can get together and agree on something. Not even politicians can do that! Me, I’m sticking with NAFLD.”

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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