Hispanics Suffer 2x U.S. Liver Cancer Risk as Genes, Obesity and Access Gaps Drive Disease
Updated
Updated · UCHealth Today · Jun 11
Hispanics Suffer 2x U.S. Liver Cancer Risk as Genes, Obesity and Access Gaps Drive Disease
2 articles · Updated · UCHealth Today · Jun 11
Summary
Hispanics have the highest liver disease rates among U.S. adults, and Hispanic men are especially likely to develop and die from it; overall, Hispanics are more than twice as likely as non-Hispanic Whites to get liver cancer.
PNPLA3—a gene more prevalent in Hispanics—raises susceptibility, while obesity, diabetes and alcohol can accelerate fat buildup, inflammation, fibrosis and eventually cirrhosis.
Mexican-origin Hispanics face the greatest burden: they make up about 60% of the U.S. Hispanic population and develop liver disease about twice as often as other U.S. adults.
35% obesity and 12% diabetes rates in U.S. Hispanics, along with poorer access to preventive care and costly weight-loss drugs, leave many high-risk patients untreated until advanced disease.
26,000 U.S. deaths a year from cirrhosis underscore the stakes; experts urge liver-function testing, FIB-4 follow-up, hepatitis screening and hepatitis B vaccination, while warning that liver “detox” supplements lack evidence.