Background and Aims:Liver biopsy remains the gold stand-ard for staging of chronic liver disease following orthotopic liver transplantation.Noninvasive assessment of fibrosis with Fibro-test(FT)is well-studied in immu...Background and Aims:Liver biopsy remains the gold stand-ard for staging of chronic liver disease following orthotopic liver transplantation.Noninvasive assessment of fibrosis with Fibro-test(FT)is well-studied in immunocompetent populations with chronic hepatitis C virus infection.The aim of this study is to investigate the diagnostic value of FT in the assessment of hepatic fibrosis in the allografts of liver transplant recipients with evidence of recurrent hepatitis C.Methods:We retro-spectively compared liver biopsies and FT performed within a median of 1 month of each other in orthotopic liver transplan-tation recipients with recurrent hepatitis C.Results:The study population comprised 22 patients,most of them male(19/22),and with median age of 62 years.For all patients,there was at least a one-stage difference in fibrosis as assessed by liver biopsy compared to FT,while for the majority(16/22)there was at least a two-stage difference.The absence of correlation between the two modalities was statistically demonstrated(Mann-Whitney U test,p=0.01).In detecting significant fib-rosis(a METAVIR stage of F2 and above),an FT cut-off of 0.5 showed moderate sensitivity(77%)and negative predictive value(80%),but suboptimal specificity(61%)and positive predictive value(58%).Conclusions:In post-transplant pa-tients with recurrent hepatitis C,FT appears to be inaccurately assessing the degree of allograft fibrosis,therefore limiting its reliability as a staging tool.展开更多
文摘Background and Aims:Liver biopsy remains the gold stand-ard for staging of chronic liver disease following orthotopic liver transplantation.Noninvasive assessment of fibrosis with Fibro-test(FT)is well-studied in immunocompetent populations with chronic hepatitis C virus infection.The aim of this study is to investigate the diagnostic value of FT in the assessment of hepatic fibrosis in the allografts of liver transplant recipients with evidence of recurrent hepatitis C.Methods:We retro-spectively compared liver biopsies and FT performed within a median of 1 month of each other in orthotopic liver transplan-tation recipients with recurrent hepatitis C.Results:The study population comprised 22 patients,most of them male(19/22),and with median age of 62 years.For all patients,there was at least a one-stage difference in fibrosis as assessed by liver biopsy compared to FT,while for the majority(16/22)there was at least a two-stage difference.The absence of correlation between the two modalities was statistically demonstrated(Mann-Whitney U test,p=0.01).In detecting significant fib-rosis(a METAVIR stage of F2 and above),an FT cut-off of 0.5 showed moderate sensitivity(77%)and negative predictive value(80%),but suboptimal specificity(61%)and positive predictive value(58%).Conclusions:In post-transplant pa-tients with recurrent hepatitis C,FT appears to be inaccurately assessing the degree of allograft fibrosis,therefore limiting its reliability as a staging tool.