Literature DB >> 17631134

Progressive fibrosis in nonalcoholic steatohepatitis: association with altered regeneration and a ductular reaction.

Michelle M Richardson1, Julie R Jonsson, Elizabeth E Powell, Elizabeth M Brunt, Brent A Neuschwander-Tetri, Prithi S Bhathal, John B Dixon, Martin D Weltman, Herbert Tilg, Alexander R Moschen, David M Purdie, Anthony J Demetris, Andrew D Clouston.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND & AIMS: Portal fibrosis and linkage is a key feature of progressive disease in nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), but not simple steatosis. It is underappreciated and poorly understood. Fatty liver has impaired regeneration that induces a secondary replicative pathway using bipotential, periportal, hepatic progenitor cells (HPCs). We propose that activation of this pathway, with increased cell injury in NASH, also induces a periportal ductular reaction (DR) that could produce a profibrogenic stimulus.
METHODS: Biopsy specimens from 107 patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease and 11 controls were immunostained with cytokeratin-7 to quantify the DR and HPCs, and with p21 to assess hepatocyte replicative arrest. These results were correlated with clinicopathologic variables.
RESULTS: Patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease had expansion of HPCs, with a strong association between HPCs and the DR (r(s) = 0.582, P < .0001). In those with NASH (n = 69) there was an increased DR compared with simple steatosis, which correlated with the stage of fibrosis (r(s) = 0.510, P < .0001). The DR increased with the grade of NASH activity (r(s) = 0.478, P < .0001), grade of portal inflammation (r(s) = 0.445, P < .0001), and extent of hepatocyte replicative arrest (r(s) = 0.446, P < .0001). Replicative arrest was in turn associated with insulin resistance (r(s) = 0.450, P < .0001) and NASH activity (r(s) = 0.452, P < .0001). By multivariate analysis, the extent of DR (odds ratio [OR] = 17.9, P = .016), hepatocyte ballooning (OR = 8.1, P < .0001), and portal inflammation (OR = 3.3, P = .005) were associated independently with fibrosis.
CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that an altered replication pathway in active NASH promotes a periportal DR, which in turn may provoke progressive periportal fibrogenesis.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17631134     DOI: 10.1053/j.gastro.2007.05.012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gastroenterology        ISSN: 0016-5085            Impact factor:   22.682


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