| Literature DB >> 33704581 |
Ulrike Teufel-Schäfer1,2, Christa Flechtenmacher3, Alexander Fichtner4, Georg Friedrich Hoffmann4, Jens Peter Schenk5, Guido Engelmann6.
Abstract
Currently, liver histology is the gold standard for the detection of liver fibrosis. In recent years, new methods such as transient elastography (TE) have been introduced into clinical practice, which allow a non-invasive assessment of liver fibrosis. The aim of the present study was to investigate the predictive value of TE for higher grade fibrosis and whether there is any relevance which histologic score is used for matching. For this purpose, we compared TE with 4 different histologic scores in pediatric patients with hepatopathies. Furthermore, we also determined the aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio (APRI) score, another non-invasive method, to investigate whether it is equally informative. Therefore, liver fibrosis in 75 children was evaluated by liver biopsy, TE and laboratory values. Liver biopsies were evaluated using four common histological scoring systems (Desmet, Metavir, Ishak and Chevalier's semi-quantitative scoring system). The median age of the patients was 12.3 years. TE showed a good correlation to the degree of fibrosis severity independent of the histological scoring system used. The accuracy of the TE to distinguish between no/minimal fibrosis and severe fibrosis/cirrhosis was good (p = 0.001, AUC-ROCs > 0.81). The optimal cut-off value for the prediction of severe fibrosis was 10.6 kPa. In contrast, the APRI score in our collective showed no correlation to fibrosis.Entities:
Keywords: Histological scoring; Liver fibrosis; Pediatric; Transient elastography
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33704581 PMCID: PMC8195947 DOI: 10.1007/s00431-021-04001-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pediatr ISSN: 0340-6199 Impact factor: 3.183
Grading of fibrosis in no/minimal fibrosis, moderate fibrosis and severe fibrosis/cirrhosis to the histological scoring
| No/minimal fibrosis | Moderate fibrosis | Severe fibrosis/cirrhosis | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Desmet | F0, F1 ( | F2 ( | F3, F4 ( |
| Metavir | F0, F1 ( | F2 ( | F3, F4 ( |
| Ishak | 0, 1 ( | 2–3 ( | 4–6 ( |
| SQS | 0–3 ( | 4–11 ( | 12–17 ( |
SQS semi-quantitative scoring system of Chevalier
Characteristics of included patients at the time of liver biopsy
| Characteristics | Patients ( |
|---|---|
| Gender (female), | 33 (44%) |
Age (years), mean (range) 0–11 years (prepubertal), 12–18 years, > 18 years, | 12.3 (0.4–21.5) 37 (49.3) 32 (42.7) 6 (8.0) |
| BMI-SDS, mean (range) | − 0.01 (− 4.27–3.15) |
| Diagnoses, | |
| Autoimmune hepatitis | 14 (18.7) |
| NASH | 10 (13.3) |
| Wilson’s disease | 8 (10.7) |
| Liver transplantation | 8 (10.7) |
| Metabolic liver disease | 9 (12) |
| Hepatopathy of unknown origin | 19 (25.3) |
| Others* | 7 (9.3) |
| ALT [U/l], mean (range) | 271 (9–3884) |
| AST [U/l], mean (range) | 217 (8–2706) |
BMI-SDS BMI standard deviation score, NASH non-alcoholic steatohepatitis
*Autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (ARPKD), PSC, hepatopathy in chronic intestinal pseudoobstruction, hepatitis B and hepatopathy in Wegener’s granulomatosis
Results of TE in kilopascal expressed as median and IQR and APRI expressed as median and range for NF, MF and C of each histological score
| NF | MF | C | NF vs MF | NF vs C | MF vs C | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Post hoc* | |||||||
| TE-D (kPa) | 5.75 (4.8–8.9) | 7.1 (5.8–14.5) | 18.65 (10.4–36.3) | ||||
| TE-M (kPa) | 6.1 (4.8–9.1) | 6.8 (5.8–12.7) | 20.0 (11.4–32.4) | ||||
| TE-I (kPa) | 5.3 (4.6–8.1) | 7.1 (5.8–13.2) | 20.0 (11.4–32.4) | ||||
| TE-S (kPa) | 5.75 (4.8–8.8) | 6.95 (5.8–15.3) | 24.9 (11.4–48.0) | ||||
| APRI-D | 0.54 (0.19–0.99) | 0.73 (0.45–1.44) | 0.78 (0.4–3.01) | Not applicable | |||
| APRI-M | 0.57 (0.19–1.25) | 0.65 (0.44–1.17) | 0.8 (0.42–3.08) | Not applicable | |||
| APRI-I | 0.44 (0.19–1.05) | 0.65 (0.45–1.17) | 0.8 (0.42–3.08) | Not applicable | |||
| APRI-S | 0.47 (0.18–0.87) | 0.73 (0.45–1.77) | 0.8 (0.42–3.08) | Not applicable | |||
APRI aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio, C severe fibrosis/cirrhosis, D Desmet, I Ishak, M Metavir, MF moderate fibrosis, n.s. no significance, NF no/minimal fibrosis, p = p value, kPa kilopascal, S semi-quantitative scoring system of Chevalier, TE transient elastography
#Kruskal–Wallis test
*Dunn’s post hoc test
Fig. 1ROC curve for discrimination between no/moderate fibrosis and severe fibrosis/cirrhosis by TE stratified according to different fibrosis scoring systems. Desmet-AUC = 0.81 [0.68–0.94]; Metavir/Ishak-AUC = 0.83 [0.71–0.90]; SQS-AUC = 0.89 [0.80–0.98]. AUC area under the curve, SQS semi-quantitative scoring system of Chevalier
Linear regression model to identify factors associated with increased liver stiffness
| Univariate | Multivariate | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coefficient | Coefficient | |||
| Age | 0.091 | 0.540 | ||
| BMS-SDS | − 0.427 | 0.471 | ||
| ALT | 0.001 | 0.419 | ||
| Bilirubin | 0.709 | < 0.001 | 0.571 | 0.015 |
| Albumin | − 0.365 | 0.036 | ||
| CHE | − 1.792 | < 0.001 | − 1.040 | 0.033 |
| INR | 23.624 | 0.001 | ||
| Platelet | − 0.021 | < 0.001 | − 0.021 | 0.022 |
BMS-SDS body mass index standard deviation score, ALT alanine aminotransferase, CHE cholinesterase, INR international normalized ratio
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