Abstract

The definitive diagnosis of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is currently based on histopathological assessment. This study aimed to elucidate the utility of a novel noninvasive method, three-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging (3D-MRI), for diagnosing advanced fibrosis in patients with NASH, using histopathological diagnosis as the reference standard. This retrospective study included 30 consecutive patients who had been diagnosed with NASH by histopathology and had undergone 3D-MRI before biopsy. 3D-MRI provided a three-dimensional reconstruction of the liver from contrast-enhanced hepatobiliary phase MR images. In the present study, histopathological advanced fibrosis was defined as stage 3 and 4 NASH. Advanced fibrosis, diagnosed by 3D-MRI, was considered to be diffuse irregularity of the entire surface of the liver. The diagnostic features of 3D-MRI and the noninvasive evaluation systems (APRI, FIB-4 index, and BARD score) for identifying advanced and nonadvanced fibrosis of NASH were determined and compared. Nine (30%) of the 30 study patients were diagnosed histopathologically with advanced fibrosis, and 11 (37%) of 30 patients were diagnosed with advanced fibrosis using 3D-MRI. The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), and negative predictive value (NPV) of 3D-MRI for diagnosing advanced fibrosis were 100, 90, 82, and 100%, respectively. The sensitivities of APRI, the FIB-4 index, and BARD score ranged from 78 to 89%, the specificities from 71 to 90%, the PPVs from 54 to 78%, and the NPVs from 88 to 94%. Compared with the common noninvasive methods for diagnosing advanced fibrosis associated with NASH, 3D-MRI was more accurate.

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