Abstract
To assess the value of various diffusion parameters obtained from monoexponential, biexponential, and stretched-exponential diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) models for staging hepatic fibrosis (HF) and grading inflammatory activity in patients with chronic hepatitis B (CHB). 82 patients with CHB and 30 healthy volunteers underwent DWI with 13 b-values on a 3T MRI unit. The standard apparent diffusion coefficient (ADCst) was calculated using a monoexponential model. The true diffusion coefficient (Dt), pseudo-diffusion coefficient (Dp), and perfusion fraction (f) were calculated using a biexponential model. The distributed diffusion coefficient (DDC) and water-molecule diffusion heterogeneity index (α) were calculated using a stretched-exponential model. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were performed for diffusion parameters to compare the diagnosis performance. The distributions of hepatic fibrosis stages and the inflammatory activity grades (METAVIR scoring system) were as follows: F0, n = 1; F1, n = 16; F2, n = 31; F3, n = 19; and F4, n = 15. A0, n = 1; A1, n = 14; A2, n = 46; and A3, n = 21. ADCst, Dt and DDC values showed negative correlation with the fibrosis stage (r = - 0.418, - 0.717 and - 0.630, all P < 0.001) and the inflammatory activity grade (r = - 0.514, - 0.626 and - 0.550, all P < 0.001). The area under the ROC curve (AUC) of Dt (AUC = 0.854, 0.881) and DDC (AUC = 0.794, 0.834) were significantly higher than that of ADCst (AUC = 0.637, 0.717) in discriminating significant fibrosis (≥ F2) and advanced fibrosis (≥ F3) (all P < 0.05). Although Dt (AUC = 0.867, 0.836) and DDC (AUC = 0.810, 0.808) showed higher AUCs than ADCst (AUC = 0.767, 0.803), there was no significant difference in their ability in detecting inflammatory activity grade ≥ A2/A3 (P > 0.05). Dt and DDC are promising indicators and outperform ADCst for staging HF. While both Dt and DDC have similar diagnostic performance compared with ADCst for grading inflammatory activity.
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