v. petrenkiene*, d. petrauskas l. kupcinskas, lithuanian university of health sciences clinic of...

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V. Petrenkiene*, D. Petrauskas L. Kupcinskas, Lithuanian University of Health sciences Clinic of Gastroenterology Kaunas Utility of non-invasive markers for prediction of significant hepatic fibrosis in chronic hepatitis C patients

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Page 1: V. Petrenkiene*, D. Petrauskas L. Kupcinskas, Lithuanian University of Health sciences Clinic of Gastroenterology Kaunas Utility of non-invasive markers

V. Petrenkiene*, D. Petrauskas L. Kupcinskas, Lithuanian University of Health sciences

Clinic of Gastroenterology Kaunas

Utility of non-invasive markers for prediction of significant hepatic

fibrosis in chronic hepatitis C patients

Page 2: V. Petrenkiene*, D. Petrauskas L. Kupcinskas, Lithuanian University of Health sciences Clinic of Gastroenterology Kaunas Utility of non-invasive markers

• Over the past decade many studies have evaluated non-invasive tests of liver fibrosis to assess the presence and severity of fibrosis in chronic liver diseases.

• Non-invasive markers and commercial tests of liver fibrosis have been proposed and assessed in the clinical setting as surrogates of liver biopsy.

• However, their implementation in clinical practice is slow and still limited.

BACKGROUNDBACKGROUND

Page 3: V. Petrenkiene*, D. Petrauskas L. Kupcinskas, Lithuanian University of Health sciences Clinic of Gastroenterology Kaunas Utility of non-invasive markers

AIM

To determine the utility of non-invasive markers using routine laboratory tests for the prediction of significant fibrosis and cirrhosis in a cohort of chronic hepatitis C (CHC) patients

Page 4: V. Petrenkiene*, D. Petrauskas L. Kupcinskas, Lithuanian University of Health sciences Clinic of Gastroenterology Kaunas Utility of non-invasive markers

METHODS (1)

• Treatment naive 18-70 years old CHC patients with serum HCV-antibody and HCV RNA positivity.

• Having liver biopsy between Jan 2000 and Nov 2005 with sufficient liver tissue for fibrosis staging (>7 intact portal tracts).

• Having a blood sample drawn for the measurement of the liver panel and blood counts one day before the biopsy and abdominal ultrasound examinations with measurement of spleen diameter.

• Patients without a history of alcohol intake (> 30 g/day for males and 20 g/day for females).

• No evidence of other liver diseases.

Inclusion criteria

Page 5: V. Petrenkiene*, D. Petrauskas L. Kupcinskas, Lithuanian University of Health sciences Clinic of Gastroenterology Kaunas Utility of non-invasive markers

Biopsy: Menghini 14-gauge needle;Histology: Knodell–Ishak fibrosis staging system on a scale F0-F6 (Masson trichrome stain).

1. Fibrosis of some portal areas. 3. Fibrosis with occasional (P-P) bridging.

4. Fibrosis with P-P and P-C bridging.5. Incomplete cirrhosis. 6. Cirrhosis, probable or definite.

2. Fibrosis expansion of most portal areas.

Staging was performed blinded to clinical data by one expert pathologist.

METHODS (2)METHODS (2)

Page 6: V. Petrenkiene*, D. Petrauskas L. Kupcinskas, Lithuanian University of Health sciences Clinic of Gastroenterology Kaunas Utility of non-invasive markers

METHODS (3)

1. AAR - AST/ALT.

2. Platelet count.

3. APRI - AST/platelet count (×109/l)×100.

4. GUCI (the Göteborg University Cirrhosis Index):AST×prothrombin(INR)×100/platelet count (×109/l).

5. Platelet count/spleen diameter ratio index.

Indirect non-invasive testsof liver fibrosis used

Page 7: V. Petrenkiene*, D. Petrauskas L. Kupcinskas, Lithuanian University of Health sciences Clinic of Gastroenterology Kaunas Utility of non-invasive markers

METHODS (4)

402 CHC PATIENTS REGISTERED FROM January 2000 UNTIL November 2005

323 CHC PATIENTSINCLUDED

43 patients with insufficient liver sample

31 patients with incomplete data

5 patients withactive alcohol abuse

F 0-2N=148

F 3-6N=175

F 5-6N=67

Flow diagram of the potential candidatesfor participation in the study

Page 8: V. Petrenkiene*, D. Petrauskas L. Kupcinskas, Lithuanian University of Health sciences Clinic of Gastroenterology Kaunas Utility of non-invasive markers

RESULTS (1)

323 naive CHC patients 194 (60.1%) male 129 (39.9%) female

Mean age: 48.5 year Histological staging

F0 6.5% (n= 21) F1 13.9% (n= 45) F2 25.4% (n= 82) F3 23.5% (n= 76) F4 9.9% (n= 32) F5 3.7% (n= 12) F6 17.0% (n= 55)

Page 9: V. Petrenkiene*, D. Petrauskas L. Kupcinskas, Lithuanian University of Health sciences Clinic of Gastroenterology Kaunas Utility of non-invasive markers

METHODS (5)

• Quantitative data were expressed as mean and standard error (SE).

• The variation in the proportions were assessed using Chi-square test. • P values of 0.05 were considered significant.

• The diagnostic value for each marker was assessed using the area under the receiver operating characteristics curves (AUROC).

• Statistical analysis was carried out using the SPSS 12.0 software

package.

Statistical analysis

Page 10: V. Petrenkiene*, D. Petrauskas L. Kupcinskas, Lithuanian University of Health sciences Clinic of Gastroenterology Kaunas Utility of non-invasive markers

Results (2)

VariablesPrediction of significant fibrosis

(F3-F6)AUC (95%CI)

Prediction of cirrhosis(F5-F6)

AUC (95%CI)

Platelet count 0.69 (0.49-0.71) 0.85 (0.72-0.89)

AAR 0.65 (0.59-0.72) 0.76 (0.69-0.83)

APRI 0.73 (0.68-0.79) 0.89 (0.84-0.94)

GUCI 0.74 (0.69-0.79) 0.89 (0.85-0.95)

Platelet/spleendiameter

0.71 (0.65-0.77) 0.88 (0.88-0.93)

Variables for predictingsignificant fibrosis and cirrhosis

Page 11: V. Petrenkiene*, D. Petrauskas L. Kupcinskas, Lithuanian University of Health sciences Clinic of Gastroenterology Kaunas Utility of non-invasive markers

RESULTS (3)

VariablesSignificant fibrosis

(F3-F6) Cirrhosis(F5-F6)

Presence Absence

APRI ≥1.5 <2.0

Platelet/spleen diameter <1.5 >1.5

AAR ≥ 1 <1

GUCI >1.5 <2.0

Platelet count <150 x10(9)/L ≥ 150 x10(9)/L

Cut-off points to predict the absence or presence of significant fibrosis and cirrhosis

Page 12: V. Petrenkiene*, D. Petrauskas L. Kupcinskas, Lithuanian University of Health sciences Clinic of Gastroenterology Kaunas Utility of non-invasive markers

RESULTS (4)

Variables Sensitivity %

Specificity %

PPV % NPV % Accuracy %

Platelet count 42.5 87.8 80.4 56.5 63.4

AAR 46.8 89.2 83.7 58.7 66.3

APRI 81,4 61.7 79.5 70.7 72.1

GUCI 58.0 81.5 58.0 38.0 68.8

Platelet/spleen diameter

56.1 79.5 76.4 60.4 60.2

Sensitivity, specificity, positive (PPV), and negative (NPV) predictive value of evaluated parameters in detecting significant (F 3-6) fibrosis

Page 13: V. Petrenkiene*, D. Petrauskas L. Kupcinskas, Lithuanian University of Health sciences Clinic of Gastroenterology Kaunas Utility of non-invasive markers

RESULTS (5)

Variables Sensitivity %

Specificity %

PPV % NPV % Accuracy %

Platelet count 73.1 83.1 52.3 92.2 81.1

AAR 80.1 81.6 50.0 92.9 80.5

APRI 83.6 85.5 60.2 95.2 85.1

GUCI 83.6 82.6 56.0 95.0 82.8

Platelet/spleen diameter

87.8 72.7 45.7 95.8 75.9

Sensitivity, specificity, positive (PPV), and negative (NPV) predictive value of evaluated parameters in detecting cirrhosis (F 5-6)

Page 14: V. Petrenkiene*, D. Petrauskas L. Kupcinskas, Lithuanian University of Health sciences Clinic of Gastroenterology Kaunas Utility of non-invasive markers

CONCLUSIONS (1)

• Non-invasive tests of liver fibrosis based on a few standard laboratory tests: APRI, platelet count, AST/ALT ratio, GUCI, platelet count/spleen diameter ratio are useful to predict advanced fibrosis in HCV-infected patients and can bee used in clinical setting when liver biopsy is not available (outpatient care, regional hospitals).

• Prediction of cirrhosis (F5-F6) by simple non-invasive tests is superior to prediction of significant fibrosis (F3-F6).

Page 15: V. Petrenkiene*, D. Petrauskas L. Kupcinskas, Lithuanian University of Health sciences Clinic of Gastroenterology Kaunas Utility of non-invasive markers

CONCLUSIONS (2)

• Implementation of fibrosis markers using routine laboratory tests can reduce, but not completely eliminate, the need for liver biopsy. 

• Therefore,, liver biopsy still remain a ‘gold standard’ foriver biopsy still remain a ‘gold standard’ for assessment assessment ofof liver liver fibrosis in tertiary hospital setting.fibrosis in tertiary hospital setting.

Page 16: V. Petrenkiene*, D. Petrauskas L. Kupcinskas, Lithuanian University of Health sciences Clinic of Gastroenterology Kaunas Utility of non-invasive markers

Kaunas, Lithuania