For Clinicians

Better-Prepared Patients, Better Appointments

Your patients use LiverTracker to organize their lab results and track trends. They can share a secure, read-only summary with you — no login required on your end.

How Doctor Sharing Works

1

Patient uploads labs

Your patient uploads their lab reports (PDF or photo). AI extracts all values automatically.

2

Patient generates a share link

They create a secure, time-limited link from their dashboard and send it to you.

3

You view organized data

Click the link to see extracted values, trend charts, MELD scores, and imaging history — no login needed.

What You See in a Shared Report

Complete lab value history with dates

Interactive trend charts for all liver markers

Calculated MELD, MELD-Na, MELD 3.0, and Child-Pugh scores

FibroScan results and fibrosis staging

Imaging report summaries and findings

AI-generated liver health summary

Consolidated lab report view across all uploads

Patient-entered notes and medication history

Clinical Value

Saves appointment time

Patients arrive with organized data. Less time reviewing scattered records, more time on clinical decisions.

Longitudinal view

See how liver markers have trended over months or years — not just the latest snapshot.

Accurate scoring

MELD and Child-Pugh scores are calculated using validated formulas from the latest clinical guidelines.

Patient engagement

Patients who track their health are more adherent to treatment plans and follow-up schedules.

Evidence-Based & Peer-Citable

LiverTracker's clinical scoring methodology is documented in a formal software publication on Zenodo (CERN), with full references to the original peer-reviewed studies.

DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18934364Open Access · Version 16.1.0

Key references used in our scoring implementation:

  • Kamath PS et al. A model to predict survival in patients with end-stage liver disease. Hepatology. 2001;33(2):464-470.
  • Kim WR et al. Hyponatremia and mortality among patients on the liver-transplant waiting list. N Engl J Med. 2008;359(10):1018-1026.
  • Kim WR et al. MELD 3.0: Updated for the 21st Century. Hepatology. 2021;74(4):1956-1963.
  • Pugh RN et al. Transection of the oesophagus for bleeding oesophageal varices. Br J Surg. 1973;60(8):646-649.

Academic inquiries: Dr. Jyotsna Priyam (ORCID)

Recommend LiverTracker to Your Patients

It's free for patients. They upload their labs, and you get organized data via a secure link.

Patient Sign Up Page