Transient elastography in autoimmune hepatitis: Timing determines the impact of inflammation and fibrosis

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Transient elastography in autoimmune hepatitis: Timing determines the impact of inflammation and fibrosis. / Hartl, Johannes; Denzer, Ulrike Walburga; Ehlken, Hanno; Zenouzi, Roman; Peiseler, Moritz; Sebode, Marcial; Hübener, Sina; Pannicke, Nadine; Weiler-Normann, Christina; Quaas, Alexander; Lohse, Ansgar W; Schramm, Christoph.

in: J HEPATOL, Jahrgang 65, Nr. 4, 01.10.2016, S. 769-75.

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@article{dadbcfea74864b3d88a0dc45348c31b7,
title = "Transient elastography in autoimmune hepatitis: Timing determines the impact of inflammation and fibrosis",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: There is an unmet need for the non-invasive monitoring of fibrosis progression in patients with autoimmune hepatitis (AIH).AIMS: To assess the diagnostic performance of transient elastography in patients with AIH and to investigate the impact of disease activity on its diagnostic accuracy.METHODS: Optimal cut-offs were defined in a prospective pilot-study (n=34) and the diagnostic performance of transient elastography validated in an independent second cohort (n=60). To explore the impact of disease activity on liver stiffness, patients were stratified according to biochemical response and the time interval between start of immunosuppression and transient elastography.RESULTS: Liver stiffness strongly correlated with histological fibrosis stage (pilot-study: ρ = 0.611, p< 0.001; validation cohort: ρ=0.777, p<0.0001). ROC curves defined an AUROC of 0.95 for diagnosing cirrhosis at the optimal cut-off of 16 kPa. The performance of transient elastography was impaired when patients were analysed in whom transient elastography was performed within 3 months from start of treatment. In this setting, liver stiffness correlated with histological grading (ρ=0.558, p=0.001), but not with staging. In contrast, using the cut-off of 16 kPa, the accuracy for diagnosing cirrhosis was excellent in patients treated for 6 months or longer (AUROC 1.0).CONCLUSIONS: Liver inflammation has a major impact on liver stiffness in the first months of AIH treatment. However, TE has an excellent diagnostic accuracy for separating severe from non-severe fibrosis after 6 months of immunosuppressive treatment.LAY SUMMARY: Transient elastography (TE) is a special ultrasound scan, which assesses liver stiffness as a surrogate marker for liver fibrosis/scarring. Transient elastography has been shown to be a reliable non-invasive method to assess liver fibrosis in various chronic liver diseases, it takes less than 5 minutes and has a high patient acceptance. The current study validated for the first time this technique in a large cohort of patients with autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) and demonstrates that it is a reliable tool to detect liver fibrosis in treated AIH. For the monitoring of potential disease progression under treatment, the validation of liver stiffness as non-invasive marker of liver fibrosis will greatly improve patient care in autoimmune hepatitis.",
author = "Johannes Hartl and Denzer, {Ulrike Walburga} and Hanno Ehlken and Roman Zenouzi and Moritz Peiseler and Marcial Sebode and Sina H{\"u}bener and Nadine Pannicke and Christina Weiler-Normann and Alexander Quaas and Lohse, {Ansgar W} and Christoph Schramm",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2016 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.",
year = "2016",
month = oct,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.jhep.2016.05.023",
language = "English",
volume = "65",
pages = "769--75",
journal = "J HEPATOL",
issn = "0168-8278",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Transient elastography in autoimmune hepatitis: Timing determines the impact of inflammation and fibrosis

AU - Hartl, Johannes

AU - Denzer, Ulrike Walburga

AU - Ehlken, Hanno

AU - Zenouzi, Roman

AU - Peiseler, Moritz

AU - Sebode, Marcial

AU - Hübener, Sina

AU - Pannicke, Nadine

AU - Weiler-Normann, Christina

AU - Quaas, Alexander

AU - Lohse, Ansgar W

AU - Schramm, Christoph

N1 - Copyright © 2016 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

PY - 2016/10/1

Y1 - 2016/10/1

N2 - BACKGROUND: There is an unmet need for the non-invasive monitoring of fibrosis progression in patients with autoimmune hepatitis (AIH).AIMS: To assess the diagnostic performance of transient elastography in patients with AIH and to investigate the impact of disease activity on its diagnostic accuracy.METHODS: Optimal cut-offs were defined in a prospective pilot-study (n=34) and the diagnostic performance of transient elastography validated in an independent second cohort (n=60). To explore the impact of disease activity on liver stiffness, patients were stratified according to biochemical response and the time interval between start of immunosuppression and transient elastography.RESULTS: Liver stiffness strongly correlated with histological fibrosis stage (pilot-study: ρ = 0.611, p< 0.001; validation cohort: ρ=0.777, p<0.0001). ROC curves defined an AUROC of 0.95 for diagnosing cirrhosis at the optimal cut-off of 16 kPa. The performance of transient elastography was impaired when patients were analysed in whom transient elastography was performed within 3 months from start of treatment. In this setting, liver stiffness correlated with histological grading (ρ=0.558, p=0.001), but not with staging. In contrast, using the cut-off of 16 kPa, the accuracy for diagnosing cirrhosis was excellent in patients treated for 6 months or longer (AUROC 1.0).CONCLUSIONS: Liver inflammation has a major impact on liver stiffness in the first months of AIH treatment. However, TE has an excellent diagnostic accuracy for separating severe from non-severe fibrosis after 6 months of immunosuppressive treatment.LAY SUMMARY: Transient elastography (TE) is a special ultrasound scan, which assesses liver stiffness as a surrogate marker for liver fibrosis/scarring. Transient elastography has been shown to be a reliable non-invasive method to assess liver fibrosis in various chronic liver diseases, it takes less than 5 minutes and has a high patient acceptance. The current study validated for the first time this technique in a large cohort of patients with autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) and demonstrates that it is a reliable tool to detect liver fibrosis in treated AIH. For the monitoring of potential disease progression under treatment, the validation of liver stiffness as non-invasive marker of liver fibrosis will greatly improve patient care in autoimmune hepatitis.

AB - BACKGROUND: There is an unmet need for the non-invasive monitoring of fibrosis progression in patients with autoimmune hepatitis (AIH).AIMS: To assess the diagnostic performance of transient elastography in patients with AIH and to investigate the impact of disease activity on its diagnostic accuracy.METHODS: Optimal cut-offs were defined in a prospective pilot-study (n=34) and the diagnostic performance of transient elastography validated in an independent second cohort (n=60). To explore the impact of disease activity on liver stiffness, patients were stratified according to biochemical response and the time interval between start of immunosuppression and transient elastography.RESULTS: Liver stiffness strongly correlated with histological fibrosis stage (pilot-study: ρ = 0.611, p< 0.001; validation cohort: ρ=0.777, p<0.0001). ROC curves defined an AUROC of 0.95 for diagnosing cirrhosis at the optimal cut-off of 16 kPa. The performance of transient elastography was impaired when patients were analysed in whom transient elastography was performed within 3 months from start of treatment. In this setting, liver stiffness correlated with histological grading (ρ=0.558, p=0.001), but not with staging. In contrast, using the cut-off of 16 kPa, the accuracy for diagnosing cirrhosis was excellent in patients treated for 6 months or longer (AUROC 1.0).CONCLUSIONS: Liver inflammation has a major impact on liver stiffness in the first months of AIH treatment. However, TE has an excellent diagnostic accuracy for separating severe from non-severe fibrosis after 6 months of immunosuppressive treatment.LAY SUMMARY: Transient elastography (TE) is a special ultrasound scan, which assesses liver stiffness as a surrogate marker for liver fibrosis/scarring. Transient elastography has been shown to be a reliable non-invasive method to assess liver fibrosis in various chronic liver diseases, it takes less than 5 minutes and has a high patient acceptance. The current study validated for the first time this technique in a large cohort of patients with autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) and demonstrates that it is a reliable tool to detect liver fibrosis in treated AIH. For the monitoring of potential disease progression under treatment, the validation of liver stiffness as non-invasive marker of liver fibrosis will greatly improve patient care in autoimmune hepatitis.

U2 - 10.1016/j.jhep.2016.05.023

DO - 10.1016/j.jhep.2016.05.023

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 27238753

VL - 65

SP - 769

EP - 775

JO - J HEPATOL

JF - J HEPATOL

SN - 0168-8278

IS - 4

ER -