Harshitha Shanmugam, Agostino Di Ciaula, Mohamad Khalil, Piero Portincasa
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Efforts to combat obesity and MASLD must extend beyond simple clinical care and pills. Rather, we need multisectoral responses to protect public and environmental health, since many health systems remain passive, and therefore facilitate the onset consequences due to unnecessary and harmful body fat over storage. Care models must pivot to risk-based screening, early detection, tailored intervention, with mitigation of environmental hazards driving involuntary exposure. This includes early liver dysfunction assessment, access to lifestyle programmes, and digital tools for remote monitoring. Building on such needs, we joined important EU-funded initiatives FOIE GRAS, PAS GRAS, and PRIMA to advance knowledge on hepatic bioenergetics, gut-liver axis dysfunction, and gene-environment interactions, while testing lifestyle-based preventive strategies. We also implemented the 13Cmethacetin breath test, a novel non-invasive functional tool that detects subclinical hepatocyte dysfunction in individuals with obesity, even before structural changes or biochemical abnormalities appear in the liver. The detrimental Tango can be interrupted at the individual level by non-invasive diagnostics, personalised prevention, adequate phenotyping, and at the community level through cross-sectoral policies oriented toward equity, sustainability, and primary prevention. Strategic, integrated actions can transform global health by advancing not only longevity but also healthspan and resilience. The Tango between the obesogenic environment and MASLD urgently requires active partners, not passive spectators. Internal medicine is pivotal in coordinating this transition across settings and disciplines.</p>","PeriodicalId":13662,"journal":{"name":"Internal and Emergency Medicine","volume":" ","pages":"1655-1661"},"PeriodicalIF":3.8000,"publicationDate":"2025-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Tango between obesogenic environment and metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD): shifting towards earlier detection.\",\"authors\":\"Harshitha Shanmugam, Agostino Di Ciaula, Mohamad Khalil, Piero Portincasa\",\"doi\":\"10.1007/s11739-025-04090-3\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Obesity prevalence is increasing worldwide, and drives the rising prevalence of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), currently the most prevalent chronic liver disease in all age groups. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
肥胖患病率在全球范围内不断上升,并推动了代谢功能障碍相关脂肪变性肝病(MASLD)患病率的上升,MASLD目前是所有年龄组中最常见的慢性肝病。与肥胖一样,MASLD与过早死亡和合并症风险增加有关。正如在Tango中一样,肥胖环境和MASLD通过涉及肠-肝-脑轴的复杂相互作用密切相互作用。一旦建立,MASLD改变对环境刺激的几种代谢反应,促进反馈循环。因此,迫切需要提高对导致代谢性疾病的途径的认识,重点关注病理生理学、使用非侵入性工具的早期诊断、环境决定因素和多学科护理模式。对抗肥胖和MASLD的努力必须超越简单的临床护理和药物。相反,我们需要多部门应对措施来保护公众和环境健康,因为许多卫生系统仍然是被动的,因此由于不必要和有害的体脂过度储存而促进了发病后果。护理模式必须以基于风险的筛查、早期发现和有针对性的干预为中心,同时减轻导致非自愿暴露的环境危害。这包括早期肝功能障碍评估、获得生活方式规划和远程监测的数字工具。基于这些需求,我们加入了重要的欧盟资助的FOIE GRAS, PAS GRAS和PRIMA计划,以推进肝脏生物能量学,肠-肝轴功能障碍和基因-环境相互作用方面的知识,同时测试基于生活方式的预防策略。我们还实施了13Cmethacetin呼气测试,这是一种新型的非侵入性功能工具,可以在肝脏出现结构变化或生化异常之前检测肥胖个体的亚临床肝细胞功能障碍。在个人层面,可通过非侵入性诊断、个体化预防和充分的表型来阻断有害的探戈,在社区层面,可通过面向公平、可持续性和初级预防的跨部门政策来阻断有害的探戈。战略性综合行动不仅可以延长寿命,而且可以延长健康期限和增强复原力,从而改变全球卫生状况。肥胖环境和MASLD之间的探戈迫切需要积极的合作伙伴,而不是被动的旁观者。在协调跨环境和学科的过渡方面,内科是关键。
Tango between obesogenic environment and metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD): shifting towards earlier detection.
Obesity prevalence is increasing worldwide, and drives the rising prevalence of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), currently the most prevalent chronic liver disease in all age groups. MASLD, like obesity, is linked to premature motality and increased risk of comorbidities. As in a Tango, the obesogenic environment and MASLD interact closely through complex interplays involving the gut-liver-brain axis. Once established, MASLD alters several metabolic responses to environmental mstimuli, promoting a feedback loop. It is therefore urgent to improve the awareness of the pathways leading to metabolic disease, focusing on pathophysiology, early diagnosis using non-invasive tools, environmental determinants, and multidisciplinary models of care. Efforts to combat obesity and MASLD must extend beyond simple clinical care and pills. Rather, we need multisectoral responses to protect public and environmental health, since many health systems remain passive, and therefore facilitate the onset consequences due to unnecessary and harmful body fat over storage. Care models must pivot to risk-based screening, early detection, tailored intervention, with mitigation of environmental hazards driving involuntary exposure. This includes early liver dysfunction assessment, access to lifestyle programmes, and digital tools for remote monitoring. Building on such needs, we joined important EU-funded initiatives FOIE GRAS, PAS GRAS, and PRIMA to advance knowledge on hepatic bioenergetics, gut-liver axis dysfunction, and gene-environment interactions, while testing lifestyle-based preventive strategies. We also implemented the 13Cmethacetin breath test, a novel non-invasive functional tool that detects subclinical hepatocyte dysfunction in individuals with obesity, even before structural changes or biochemical abnormalities appear in the liver. The detrimental Tango can be interrupted at the individual level by non-invasive diagnostics, personalised prevention, adequate phenotyping, and at the community level through cross-sectoral policies oriented toward equity, sustainability, and primary prevention. Strategic, integrated actions can transform global health by advancing not only longevity but also healthspan and resilience. The Tango between the obesogenic environment and MASLD urgently requires active partners, not passive spectators. Internal medicine is pivotal in coordinating this transition across settings and disciplines.
期刊介绍:
Internal and Emergency Medicine (IEM) is an independent, international, English-language, peer-reviewed journal designed for internists and emergency physicians. IEM publishes a variety of manuscript types including Original investigations, Review articles, Letters to the Editor, Editorials and Commentaries. Occasionally IEM accepts unsolicited Reviews, Commentaries or Editorials. The journal is divided into three sections, i.e., Internal Medicine, Emergency Medicine and Clinical Evidence and Health Technology Assessment, with three separate editorial boards. In the Internal Medicine section, invited Case records and Physical examinations, devoted to underlining the role of a clinical approach in selected clinical cases, are also published. The Emergency Medicine section will include a Morbidity and Mortality Report and an Airway Forum concerning the management of difficult airway problems. As far as Critical Care is becoming an integral part of Emergency Medicine, a new sub-section will report the literature that concerns the interface not only for the care of the critical patient in the Emergency Department, but also in the Intensive Care Unit. Finally, in the Clinical Evidence and Health Technology Assessment section brief discussions of topics of evidence-based medicine (Cochrane’s corner) and Research updates are published. IEM encourages letters of rebuttal and criticism of published articles. Topics of interest include all subjects that relate to the science and practice of Internal and Emergency Medicine.