GRIPonMASH Reaches Major Milestone: Over 5,000 Participants Enrolled and 25,000+ Samples Collected Across Europe 

Graphic announcing that the GRIPonMASH project has reached more than 5,000 participants enrolled across Europe. The visual highlights the project’s work on improving early detection of liver disease in at-risk populations and includes GRIPonMASH branding and logo.

European study reaches halfway point of ambitious goal of screening 10,000 individuals at risk of MASLD

Utrecht, The Netherlands, May 19, 2026: The GRIPonMASH project has reached a significant milestone in its mission to improve early detection and understanding of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD). More than 5,000 participants, representing over 50% of the project’s target, have now been enrolled, alongside the collection of more than 25,000 biological samples for analysis.

This achievement marks an important step toward building one of Europe’s most comprehensive datasets on MASLD, enabling large-scale research into its prevalence, progression, and early identification across diverse populations.

A Pan-European Effort to Advance Liver Health

GRIPonMASH is being carried out in 12 Centres of Excellence across 10 European countries, in collaboration with primary care and outpatient clinics. A full list of participating centres is available below.

Reaching the halfway point is scientifically significant: large-scale participation is essential to understand how MASLD prevalence and progression differ between countries, particularly in relation to cardiometabolic risk factors.

This approach also supports the development of local screening pathways and strengthens collaboration between liver specialists and other healthcare professionals. By operating across multiple countries, the project provides insight into how liver disease presents in different populations and healthcare systems.

“GRIPonMASH is helping redefine how we understand and address liver health across Europe, while generating knowledge with relevance far beyond our region. By uniting expertise, data, and healthcare systems across countries, we are building the evidence needed to shift from late treatment to earlier detection, prevention, and more integrated care, improving liver and cardiometabolic health for populations worldwide,”

Early Findings Highlight Hidden Disease Burden

Early findings already show the value of this approach. Around 60% of participants screened so far have MASLD (liver steatosis), and about 9% are at risk of significant fibrosis.

Many of these individuals are asymptomatic, highlighting the silent nature of MASLD and the urgent need for structured screening pathways. Identified participants are now being followed up according to local standards of care.

Biobank Enables Next Phase of Research

The collection of more than 25,000 samples, primarily blood, plasma and serum, marks another key milestone. 

This growing biobank now makes it possible to begin the first analyses, supporting a better understanding of disease mechanisms and the evaluation of new biomarkers that could improve how patients are identified. Preliminary results will support progress across multiple areas of the project, including the development of diagnostic tools and related research activities. 

“Bringing all these samples from the sites to the central biobank is an important achievement and reflects the strong coordination led by the team at Julius Clinical. In the coming period, biochemical data will become available, helping us to better characterise the condition. We are very grateful to our partners who are working extensively in the lab to run these analyses,”

Driving Innovation in Digital Health

In parallel, three Centres of Excellence are piloting a proprietary Liver Health Management (LHM) platform. Early feedback has highlighted the importance of interoperability with electronic health records, and the platform has recently been updated in line with the latest clinical guidelines.

These efforts represent an important step toward building integrated, scalable solutions for liver disease screening and management.

Looking Ahead

The project is now moving into a phase where recruitment continues alongside the start of preliminary analyses. Efforts across sites are ongoing to further increase participation.

Over the coming year, the focus will be on completing participant enrollment, analysing the first datasets, and further refining screening pathways and supporting tools. These steps will help translate the data collected into practical insights.

In the longer term, GRIPonMASH aims to support earlier and more consistent identification of liver disease in at-risk populations. By strengthening screening approaches and care pathways, the project contributes to improving diagnosis and enabling earlier intervention, with the goal of preventing progression to more advanced stages of disease.

Participating Centres of Excellence

  • Franciscus Gasthuis & Vlietland, The Netherlands 

  • Amsterdam UMC, The Netherlands 

  • Antwerp University Hospital, Belgium 

  • Hôpital Erasme, Cliniques Universitaires De Bruxelles, Belgium 

  • Universitätsklinikum des Saarlandes, Germany 

  • Hospital Universitario Virgen del Rocío, Spain 

  • Hôpital de la Pitié Salpêtrière, France

  • Unidade Local de Saúde Santa Maria, Portugal 

  • Fondazione Policlinico Universitario Agostino Gemelli, Italy 

  • Harokopio University of Athens, Greece 

  • General University Hospital Prague, Czech Republic 

  • Sacele Municipal Hospital, Romania