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Complex non-invasive fibrosis models are more accurate than simple models in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease

Authors :
Adams, La
George, J
Bugianesi, Elisabetta
Rossi, E
De Boer WB
van der Poorten, D
Ching, Hl
Bulsara, M
Jeffrey, G. P.
Source :
Journal of gastroenterology and hepatology. 26(10)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Significant hepatic fibrosis is prognostic of liver morbidity and mortality in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD); however, it remains unclear whether non-invasive fibrosis models can determine this end-point. We therefore compared the accuracy of simple bedside versus complex fibrosis models across a range of fibrosis in a multi-centre NAFLD cohort.Simple (APRI, BARD) and complex (Hepascore, Fibrotest, FIB4) fibrosis models were calculated in 242 NAFLD subjects undergoing liver biopsy. Significant (F2-4) and advanced fibrosis (F3,4) were defined using Kleiner criteria. Models were compared using area under the receiver operator characteristic curves (AUC). Cut-offs were determined by Youden Index or 90% predictive values.For significant fibrosis, non-invasive fibrosis models had modest accuracy (AUC 0.707-0.743) with BARD being least accurate (AUC 0.609, P0.05 vs others). Using single cut-offs, sensitivities and predictive values were80%; using two cut-offs,75% of subjects fell within indeterminate ranges. Simple models had significantly more subjects within indeterminate ranges than complex models (99.1-100% vs 82.1-84.4% respectively, P0.05 for all). For advanced fibrosis, complex models were more accurate than BARD (AUC 0.802-0.858 vs 0.701, P0.05). Using two cut-offs, complex models had fewer individuals within indeterminate ranges than BARD (11.1-32.3% vs 70.7%, P0.01 for all). For cirrhosis, complex models had higher AUC values than simple models.In NAFLD subjects, non-invasive models have modest accuracy for determining significant fibrosis and have predictive values less than 90% in the majority of subjects. Complex models are more accurate than simple bedside models across a range of fibrosis.

Details

ISSN :
14401746
Volume :
26
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of gastroenterology and hepatology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....b96b72122baea7218f85fb2bfe91e541