Liver biopsy is required for staging hepatic fibrosis in patients with chronic hepatitis C, but it is an expensive procedure with occasional complications and poor patient acceptance. This cohort study was designed to assess the accuracy of a noninvasive method aimed to discriminate between patients with and without significant liver fibrosis (stages 2-4 versus 0-1). Clinically relevant variables were analyzed in a cohort of 476 consecutive untreated patients (estimation group, 351 patients; validation group, 125 patients) with chronic hepatitis C who underwent a liver biopsy. Multivariate analysis identified age, gamma glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT), cholesterol, platelet count, and prothrombin time as independent predictors of fibrosis. We constructed a model and a score system combining age, GGT, cholesterol, and platelet count that proved useful to identify patients without significant hepatic fibrosis. The area under the ROC curve was 0.86 for the estimation group and 0.81 for the validation group. Using the best cutoff score (less than 4.2), presence of significant fibrosis (F2 to F4) could be excluded with high accuracy (negative predictive value of 96%) in 125 (36%) of 351 patients. Similarly, it could be excluded with the same certainty in 49 (39%) of the 125 patients of the validation group. Only 2 patients with liver fibrosis stage 2 were incorrectly classified. In conclusion, a combination of easily accessible variables accurately predicts the absence of significant fibrosis and might render liver biopsy unnecessary in more than one third of patients with chronic hepatitis C.
Andreas Geier, Michael Josef Reugels, Ralf Weiskirchen, Hermann E. Wasmuth, Christoph G. Dietrich, Elmar Siewert, Carsten Gartung, Johann Lorenzen, Anja‐Katrin Bosserhoff, M. Brügmann, Axel M. Gressner, Siegfried Matern, Frank Lammert
HE Wasmuth, T. Wiederholt, Edgar Dahl, Claus Hellerbrand, Juliane Halangk, Timo K. van den Berg, S Hillebrandt, Danny J. Scholten, Ralf Weiskirchen, Christian Trautwein, Frank Lammert
Hermann E. Wasmuth, Carmen G. Tag, Eddie Van de Leur, Claus Hellerbrand, Tobias Mueller, Thomas Berg, Gero Puhl, P. Neuhaus, Didier Samuel, Christian Trautwein, Sandip M. Kanse, Ralf Weiskirchen
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.