Integrating biomarkers into a comprehensive strategy is crucial for precise patient management, especially considering the significant healthcare costs associated with diseases. Current studies emphasize the urgent need for a paradigm shift in conceptualizing nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), now renamed metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD). Biomarkers are emerging as indispensable tools for accurate diagnosis, risk stratification, and monitoring disease progression. This review classifies biomarkers into conventional and novel categories, such as lipids, insulin resistance, hepatic function, and cutting-edge imaging/omics, and evaluates their potential to transform the approach to MASLD among individuals with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D). It focuses on the critical role of biomarkers in early MASLD detection, enhancing predictive accuracy, and discerning responses to interventions (pharmacological or lifestyle modifications). Amid this discussion, the complexities of the relationship between T2D and MASLD are explored, considering factors like age, gender, genetics, ethnicity, and socioeconomic background. Biomarkers enhance the effectiveness of interventions and support global initiatives to reduce the burden of MASLD, thereby improving public health outcomes. This review recognizes the promising potential of biomarkers for diagnostic precision while candidly addressing the challenges in implementing these advancements in clinical practice. The transformative role of biomarkers emerges as a central theme, promising to reshape our understanding of disease trajectories, prognosis, and the customization of personalized therapeutic strategies for improved patient outcomes. From a future perspective, identifying early-stage biomarkers, understanding environmental impact through exposomes, and applying a multiomics approach may reveal additional insight into MASLD development.
Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.