Skip to content
AASLD Family of Websites: Liver Fellow Network
AASLD.org AASLD Foundation LiverLearning Career Center Journals The Liver Meeting HCV Guidelines
AASLD Logo
AASLD Logo

LFN Main Navigation

  • Topics
    Acute Liver Failure Alcohol-Associated Liver Disease Autoimmune Hepatitis Career Development and Mentorship Cholestatic Liver Disease Complications of Liver Disease and Portal Hypertension Drug-Induced Liver Disease HepMadness Inherited Disorders Liver Anatomy, Development, and Physiology Liver Infections Liver Physiology Liver Related Infections MASLD/MASH Neoplasms of the Liver Pathology Pediatrics Pregnancy-Related Liver Disease Symptoms and Clinical Presentation of Liver Disease and Portal HTN Systemic Conditions with Hepatic Manifestations Transplantation and Surgery Vascular Viral Hepatitis
  • Core Series
    Back to Basics Clinical Pearls Webinars Evidence Corner Pathology Pearls Liver Talks Podcasts The Why? Series Tools of the Trade View All Core Series Guidelines Practice Questions
  • Tweetorials
  • About
  • Core Series
  • Evidence Corner
  • Predicting MASLD Progression

Predicting MASLD Progression

October 14, 2025

Sushrut Ingawale

Share

Copy Link Twitter Facebook
  • Sex- and age-associated factors drive the pathophysiology of MASLD (2024)
  • Liver histology is associated with long-term clinical outcomes in patients with metabolic dysfunction–associated steatohepatitis (2024)
  • Diet composition impacts the natural history of steatotic liver disease (2025)
HepMadness

Share

Copy Link Twitter Facebook

Written By:

Sushrut Ingawale

IM Resident, Quinnipiac University - Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine / St. Vincent's Medical Center, Bridgeport, CT, United States

Related Content

HepMadness

October 15, 2025

The Psychosocial Challenges of Liver Transplantation

October 14, 2025

Rethinking Alcohol-Associated Hepatitis Practice

October 14, 2025

AASLD LFN Logo

Follow Us

Disclaimer & Privacy Policy

© 2025 American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases