4.4 Article

Longitudinal assessment of liver stiffness by transient elastography for chronic hepatitis C patients

Journal

WORLD JOURNAL OF CLINICAL CASES
Volume 10, Issue 17, Pages 5566-5576

Publisher

BAISHIDENG PUBLISHING GROUP INC
DOI: 10.12998/wjcc.v10.i17.5566

Keywords

Chronic hepatitis C; Liver stiffness; Cirrhosis; Transient elastography; Direct-acting antiviral therapy

Funding

  1. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [5KL2TR001077-05]

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This study investigates the changes in liver stiffness measured by transient elastography (TE) in a large cohort of US patients with chronic hepatitis C (CHC), and compares the differences between patients treated with direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy and untreated patients.
BACKGROUND Liver fibrosis is a common pathway of liver injury and is a feature of most chronic liver diseases. Fibrosis progression varies markedly in patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV). Liver stiffness has been recommended as a parameter of fibrosis progression/regression in patients with HCV. AIM To investigate changes in liver stiffness measured by transient elastography (TE) in a large, racially diverse cohort of United States patients with chronic hepatitis C (CHC). METHODS We evaluated the differences in liver stiffness between patients treated with direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy and untreated patients. Patients had & GE; 2 TE measurements and no prior DAA exposure. We used linear regression to measure the change in liver stiffness between first and last TE in response to treatment, controlling for age, sex, race, diabetes, smoking status, human immunodeficiency virus status, baseline alanine aminotransferase, and baseline liver stiffness. Separate regression models analyzed the change in liver stiffness as measured by kPa, stratified by cirrhosis status. RESULTS Of 813 patients, 419 (52%) initiated DAA treatment. Baseline liver stiffness was 12 kPa in 127 (16%). Median time between first and last TE was 11.7 and 12.7 mo among treated and untreated patients, respectively. There was no significant change in liver stiffness observed over time in either the group initiating DAA treatment (0.016 kPa/month; CI: -0.051, 0.084) or in the untreated group (0.001 kPa/mo; CI: -0.090, 0.092), controlling for covariates. A higher baseline kPa score was independently associated with decreased liver stiffness. CONCLUSION DAA treatment was not associated with a differential change in liver stiffness over time in patients with CHC compared to untreated patients.

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