| Literature DB >> 35978676 |
Aisha Elsharkawy1, Reham Samir1, Mohamed El-Kassas2.
Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is one of the most common causes of liver pathology. It is a major etiological factor of continuous liver injury by triggering an uncontrolled inflammatory response, causing liver fibrosis and cirrhosis. Liver fibrosis is a dynamic process that can be reversible upon timely cessation of the injurious agent, which in cases of HCV is represented by the sustained virological response (SVR) following antiviral therapies. Direct-acting antiviral therapy has recently revolutionized HCV therapy and minimized complications. Liver fibrosis can be assessed with variable invasive and non-invasive methods, with certain limitations. Despite the broad validation of the diagnostic and prognostic value of non-invasive modalities of assessment of liver fibrosis in patients with HCV, the proper interpretation of liver stiffness measurement in patients after SVR remains unclear. It is also still a debate whether this regression is caused by the resolution of liver injury following treatment of HCV, rather than true fibrosis regression. Regression of liver fibrosis can possess a positive impact on patient's quality of life reducing the incidence of complications. However, fibrosis regression does not abolish the risk of developing hepatocellular carcinoma, which mandates regular screening of patients with advanced fibrosis. ©The Author(s) 2022. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Cirrhosis; Direct-acting antivirals; Fibrosis regression; Hepatitis C virus; Hepatocellular carcinoma; Liver fibrosis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35978676 PMCID: PMC9258254 DOI: 10.4254/wjh.v14.i6.1120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Hepatol
Studies illustrating outcome of liver fibrosis following hepatitis C virus clearance with direct-acting antivirals therapy
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| Knop | DAA | 54 | 24 wk | TE, ARFI | - 88% achieved an improvement of LS values at FU24; - 46% showed reduction in liver stiffness higher than 30% at FU24 |
| Bachofner | DAA | 392 | 18 mo | TE, FIB-4 and APRI scores, histopathological results were recorded if available | - Overall TE values of the included patients significantly decreased (regression of 32.4%); - Median FIB-4 and APRI values significantly decreased from 2.54 and 1.10 to 1.80 and 0.43 |
| Dolmazashvili | INF-based/DAA | 304 | 24 wk | TE | - 65.1% achieved at least a 20% reduction in LS; - Overall proportion of patients with stage F4 decreased from 56.6% to 36.5% |
| Pietsch | DAA | 143 | 24 and 96 wk | TE, FIB-4 and APRI | -A short-term reduction in LS until FU24 was seen in almost every patient regardless of stage of liver disease; -Further regression was seen in patients with early cirrhosis but not in individuals with cirrhosis and impaired liver function; -Progression of LS values occurred despite viral clearance in about one-sixth of the patients (17%) |
| Hedenstierna | DAA | 269 | 7.7 yr | TE | - A majority improved their fibrosis stage after SVR; - 24% had persisting advanced fibrosis with a LS level of ≥ 9.5 kPa |
| Lledó | DAA | 260 | SVR12 | TE | Significant fibrosis regression in 40% of the cohort patients more pronounced in patients with baseline advanced fibrosis and cirrhosis |
| Soliman | DAA/ INF-based | 180 DAA/ 180 INF-based | at SVR12, 6 mo and 1 yr | TE | Reduction in fibrosis was reported in; 46.7% and 49.3% of patients with moderate fibrosis, and 89% and 78.7% of patients with advanced fibrosis after one yr of INF containing and INF free DAAs regimens respectively |
| Shiha | DAA | 2326 | 12-45 mo | TE, and (FIB-4, FIB-5 and APRI) | - In cirrhotic patients, 21.8% showed reversal of cirrhosis, 27.4% showed fibrosis regression while 50.8% remained stationary; - About 26.5% of F3 patients showed reversal of fibrosis, 31.5% showed fibrosis regression and 30.6% remained stationary while 11.4% progressed to F4 |
| Hablass | DAA | 137 | 12 mo | TE, and FIB-4 | In all patients, the FIB-4 and TE values after HCV elimination was significantly lower than its mean values at baseline |
| El-Kady | DAA | 300 | 2 yr | TE | Both HCV treatment regimens showed improvement in liver fibrosis |
| Zakareya | DAA | 655 | 1, 3, and 5 yr | TE | There was an overall significant regression of liver stiffness in all patients after sustained HCV eradication |
| Agwa | DAA | 1230 | 12 and 48 wk | TE, FIB-4 | - 42.7% F4 patients improved and became (190) F3, (90) F2, and (220) F1; - 40 of 60 F3 patients improved and became (10) F2 and (30) F1; - 28.4% off the treated patients transited from significant fibrosis (≥ F3) to non-significant fibrosis (≤ F2) |
| Hassanin | DAA | 162 | 48 wk | TIMP-1, FIB-4 and TE | Liver |
| Thanapirom | DAA | 89 | 1 yr | TE, SWE, and MRE | Viral eradication resulted in the reduction of LS values as evaluated by three elastography techniques |
| Rosato | DAA | 516 | 24 mo | TE | - LS significantly decreased till SVR with a progressive reduction until 24 mo; - Only patients with steatosis and those who developed HCC did not experience a late improvement in LS |
| Yoo | DAA | 112 | 48, 96 and 144 wk | TE, FIB-4 and APRI | LS value in patients achieving SVR signifcantly decreased over time (19.4 ± 12.9 kPa [baseline], 13.9 ± 9.1 kPa [48 wk], 11.7 ± 8.2 kPa [96 wk], 10.09 ± 6.23 [144 wk] |
DAA: Direct acting antiviral; INF: Interferon; TE: Transient elastography; ARFI: Acoustic Radiation Force Impulse; LSM: Liver stiffness measurement; SWE: Shear wave elastography; MRE: Magnetic resonance elastography; SVR: Sustained virological response; HCC: Hepatocellular carcinoma; TIMP-1: Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-1.
Studies illustrating hepatic histological changes following hepatitis C virus clearance with direct acting antiviral therapy
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| Shiratori | INF-based | 487 | Median of 3.7 yr apart (range, 1 to 10 yr) | Criteria of Desmet and colleagues (F0 to F4) and those of the French METAVIR Cooperative Study Group (A0 to A3) | - A mean reduction in fibrosis score of -0.60+/-0.07 at less than 3 yr of follow-up and -0.88+/-0.08 at 3 yr or more of follow-up; - Reversal of cirrhosis among 11 CHC patients; - Seven patients decreased their level of fibrosis from F4 to F2 and four from F4 to F3 |
| Poynard | INF-based | 1030 | 20 mo mean duration between the biopsies | METAVIR scoring system | - Reversal and/or regression of cirrhosis occurred in 49% of patients where 15% regressed to stage 3, 16% reversed to stage 2, 15% reversed to stage 1 and 2% reversed to stage 0; - Fibrosis worsened in 15% |
| Maylin | INF-based | 126 | 3.27 yr | METAVIR scoring system | - Fibrosis stage was improved in 56%, stable in 32%, progressed in 12%; - Regression of cirrhosis was observed in 64% patients; - No cirrhosis decompensation was observed, and 3 patients developed HCC |
| George | INF-based | 49 | 5 yr | METAVIR scoring system | - 82% had a decrease in fibrosis score, and 92% had a decrease in combined inflammation score; - Two patients with pretreatment cirrhosis developed HCC and one died; - All the other patients with pretreatment cirrhosis or advanced fibrosis had improved fibrosis scores on long-term follow-up biopsy |
| D’Ambrosio | INF-based | 38 | 61 mo | METAVIR scoring system, and the area of fibrosis was measured using morphometry | - Reversal of cirrhosis in 23.6% of the patients, regression of cirrhosis in 61%; regression of fibrosis in 36% of CHC patients |
| Enomoto | DAA | 20 paired biopsy specimen | 41 ± 20 wk | Knodell scoring system and the METAVIR scoring system | - The inflammation grade significantly regressed, but the fibrosis stage did not; - Histological improvement, defined as a ≥ 2-point decrease in the Knodell inflammatory score and no worsening of the fibrosis, was found 55% patients. |
| Pan | INF-based/DAA | 15 | 3 yr | METAVIR and Batts - Ludwig grading systems | - 13 of patients had improved liver stiffness (to < 9.5 kPa) |
| Chu | INF-based | 31 | 93 mo | METAVIR scoring system and HAI | - Fibrosis regression, stable, and progression were 19%, 45%, and 36%; - A total of 71% of patients achieved inflammation improvement, whereas 6% and 23% of patients had stable disease and disease-progression, respectively |
| Cheng | DAA | 21 | 6 mo | METAVIR fibrosis score and HAI | - Fibrosis scores improved in 61.9% of the patients; - 24.8% stable course; - 14.3% progression of fibrosis |
DAA: Direct acting antiviral; INF: Interferon; HAI: Histological Activity Index; HCC: Hepatocellular carcinoma; CHC: Chronic hepatitis C.