Abstract

Liver cT1 , liver T1 , transient elastography (TE) and blood-based biomarkers have independently been shown to predict clinical outcomes but have not been directly compared in a single cohort of patients. Our aim was to compare these tests' prognostic value in a cohort of patients with compensated chronic liver disease. Patients with unselected compensated liver disease aetiologies had baseline assessments and were followed up for development of clinical outcomes, blinded to the imaging results. The prognostic value of non-invasive liver tests at prespecified thresholds was assessed for a combined clinical endpoint comprising ascites, variceal bleeding, hepatic encephalopathy, hepatocellular carcinoma, liver transplantation and mortality. One hundred and ninety-seven patients (61% male) with median age of 54years were followed up for 693 patient-years (median (IQR) 43 (26-58) months). The main diagnoses were NAFLD (41%), viral hepatitis (VH, 25%) and alcohol-related liver disease (ArLD; 14%). During follow-up 14 new clinical events, and 11 deaths occurred. Clinical outcomes were predicted by liver cT1 >825ms with HR 9.9 (95% CI: 1.29-76.4, P=.007), TE>8kPa with HR 7.8 (95% CI: 0.97-62.3, P=.02) and FIB-4>1.45 with HR 4.09 (95% CI: 0.90-18.4, P=.05). In analysis taking into account technical failure and unreliability, liver cT1 >825ms could predict clinical outcomes (P=.03), but TE>8kPa could not (P=.4). We provide further evidence that liver cT1 , TE and serum-based biomarkers can predict clinical outcomes, but when taking into account technical failure/unreliability, TE cut-offs perform worse than those of cT1 and blood biomarkers.

Highlights

  • Background & AimsLiver corrected T1 (cT1), liver T1, transient elastography (TE) and blood-based biomarkers have independently been shown to predict clinical outcomes but have not been directly compared in a single cohort of patients

  • Secondary aims were to assess the relative prognostic value of other liver-related biomarkers, including liver fat measured by MR proton spectroscopy (1H-MRS), liver iron measured by T2*, transient elastography (TE), histological fibrosis stage and blood-based composite scores (FIB-4, aminotransferase to platelet ratio index (APRI) and aminotransferase/alanine aminotransferase (AST/ALT) ratio)

  • The prognostic values of uncorrected liver T1, TE, Ishak fibrosis stage and blood-based markers of liver disease severity were assessed in the same cohort

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Summary

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Prognostic value of multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging, transient elastography and blood-based fibrosis markers in patients with chronic liver disease. A. Jayaswal1 | Christina Levick2 | Emmanuel A. Selvaraj1,2,3 | Andrea Dennis4 | Jonathan C. Booth5 | Jane Collier2 | Jeremy Cobbold2 | Elizabeth M. Tunnicliffe1 | Matthew Kelly4 | Eleanor Barnes6 | Stefan Neubauer1 | Rajarshi Banerjee4 | Michael Pavlides[1,2,3]. Funding information Medical Research Council, Grant/Award Number: MR/M015734/1; National Institute for Health Research; Oxford NIHR Biomedical Research Centre

| BACKGROUND AND AIMS
Serum biomarkers
| DISCUSSION
Findings
Number of observations and events
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