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Use of Non-Invasive Parameters of Non-Alcoholic Steatohepatitis and Liver Fibrosis in Daily Practice - An Exploratory Case-Control Study

Publication at First Faculty of Medicine |
2014

Abstract

Background: Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the hepatic manifestation of a metabolic syndrome. To date, liver biopsy has been the gold standard used to differentiate between simple steatosis and steatohepatitis/fibrosis.

Our aim was to compare the relevance of serum non-invasive parameters and scoring systems in the staging of liver fibrosis and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) in patients with NAFLD. Methods and Findings: A total of 112 consecutive patients diagnosed with NAFLD were included.

A liver biopsy was performed on 56 patients. The Kleiner score was used for the staging and grading of the histology.

Non-invasive parameters for fibrosis (hyaluronic acid; AST/ALT; fibrosis scoring indexes OELF, ELF, BARD score, APRI, NAFLD fibrosis score); and inflammation (M30 and M65 cytokeratin-18 fragments) were measured and calculated. The same analyses were performed in 56 patients diagnosed with NAFLD, who were not indicated for liver biopsy.

Based on the liver histology, NASH was diagnosed in 38 patients; simple steatosis in 18 patients. A cut-off value of 750 U/L of serum M65 discriminated patients with and without NASH with a 80% sensitivity and 82% specificity (95% CI: 57-95).

Fibrosis stage F0-F2 was present in 39 patients; F3-F4 in 17 patients. Serum concentrations of hyaluronic acid were higher in patients with advanced fibrosis (p<0.01); a cut-off value of 25 mg/l discriminated patients with F3-F4 with a 90% sensitivity and 84% specificity from those with F0-F2 (95% CI: 59-99).

When applying the non-invasive criteria to those patients without a liver biopsy, NASH could only be diagnosed in 16%; however, advanced fibrosis could be diagnosed in 35% of them. Conclusions: In patients with NAFLD, non-invasive serum parameters with a high accuracy can differentiate those patients with NASH and/or advanced fibrosis from those with simple steatosis.