Abstract

Abstract Background The most prevalent persistent parenchymatous liver alterations in healthy individuals are thought to be hepatic steatosis. The liver biopsy is the most crucial procedure for the identification and measurement of hepatic steatosis. By identifying the liver attenuation index (LAI) at an unenhanced CT image, hepatic steatosis can be evaluated without the risk of liver resection. Objective Using liver biopsy histological analysis as a reference standard, to examine the precision of the CT liver attenuation index (LAI) and fibroscan controlled attenuation parameter (CAP) for quantitative evaluation of macro vesicular steatosis in living related liver donors. Methods In this study comparing CT liver attenuation index & fibroscan controlled attenuation parameter with liver pathology of steatosis in subject's candidate for liver living donors 50 subjects in each two study's correlation with biopsy results, conducted at Ain Shams Shams Specialized hospital and other Private hospitals over about 2 years. Results Our study reported that liver – spleen attenuation index of 9 is the cutoff value with sensitivity 100% and specificity 80% that make it a very good method to exclude donor to have steatosis ≥15%, which mean if donor had LS index < 9 we can safely do proceed do liver biopsy. Our study reported that CAP measurement had an AUROC OF 0.780, for detecting steatosis ≥ 15 %, with sensitivity is only 60% with specificity as CT LAI of 80%, which consider low compared to other study, that could be due to small number of donors in out study with steatosis ≥ 15 % (5 case from 50 donors) unlike the other studies. Conclusion When used to estimate the amount of liver fat in liver donors, the examined CAP and CT indices worked equally. But according to multivariate analysis, the only factor strongly linked with hepatic steatosis in alive donors was the CT L-S attenuation index. We contend that the combination of CT L-S attenuation index and CAP allows for the detection of the degree of hepatic steatosis and can be used as an option to liver biopsy, reserving liver biopsy for those with positive steatosis donors.

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