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C-13-methacetin breath test in the evaluation of disease severity in patients with liver cirrhosis

Publication at Third Faculty of Medicine |
2013

Abstract

Aims: The non-invasive 13C-methacetin (13C-MBT) breath test has been proposed as a measure of metabolic liver function that improves the diagnostic efficacy of serologic and biochemical tests in assessing hepatic functional capacity and liver disease severity, The goal of this study was to establish the clinical utility of this test in quantifying hepatic metabolic function in patients with liver cirrhosis of varying severity and to compare 13C-MBT measurements with the AST/ALT ratio, APRI score, and other routine liver tests. Methods: Routine liver function tests including serum bilirubin, aspartate aminotransferase activity (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), AST/ALT ratio, the APRI score, the percentage of dose rate (PDR) and cumulative percentage of dose rate (CPDR) of the 13C-MBT were evaluated in 52 cirrhotic patients of alcohol etiology (Child-Pugh A/B/C 10/28/14) and 37 healthy controls.

Results: The 13C-MBT differed significantly between healthy controls and cirrhotic patients at all time intervals measured. It also proved the ability to differentiate patients with liver cirrhosis based on severity of hepatic impairment corresponding to the Child-Pugh classification A vs.

B vs. C.

The ROC curve analysis suggested that the best prediction is provided by time intervals between the 10th - 20th or 10th - 40th minute of PDR. Conclusions: The 13C-MBT offers a reliable means for quantification of hepatic metabolic function over the complete range of functional liver impairment.

It is non-invasive, easy to perform and completely safe.