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Arab Journal of Gastroenterology. 2017; 18 (2): 51-57
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-189164

ABSTRACT

Background and study aims: Hepatitis C virus [HCV] accounts for a sizable proportion of chronic liver disease cases and represents the most common indication for liver transplantation. Precise diagnosis of hepatic fibrosis stage is considered a funnel-neck in proper management and follow-up of HCV-infected patients. Given the possible complications of liver biopsy, a non-invasive method for assessing hepatic fibrosis is needed. This study aimed to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of APRI and hyaluronic acid as non-invasive diagnostic assessment tools for post HCV liver fibrosis


Patients and methods: Systematic literature searching identified studies performed on Egyptian territory to evaluate APRI and hyaluronic acid as non-invasive tests of fibrosis and using liver biopsy as the reference standard. Meta-analysis was performed for areas with an adequate number of publications. Validation of meta- analysis on APRI was done on a subset of 150 treatment-naive post-hepatitis C patients


Results: Both APRI and hyaluronic acid have superior predictive power for hepatic cirrhosis [F4] than for significant fibrosis [F2-F3]. The pooled estimate for sensitivities and specificities of APRI and hyaluronic acid to diagnose F4 were [84% and 82%] and [83% and 89%] respectively. In the subgroup of treatment naive post-hepatitis C patients, APRI had higher diagnostic performance to diagnose liver cirrhosis with 93.8% sensitivity and 72.4% specificity [AUC; 0.908, 95% CI; 0.851-0.965, p-value; <0.001] compared to its accuracy to diagnose significant hepatic fibrosis with 65.1% sensitivity and 77.8% [AUC; 0.685, 95% CI; 0.59-0.78, p-value; 0.001]


Conclusion: APRI score and hyaluronic acid levels are simple and reliable non-invasive markers to detect advanced fibrosis among post-hepatitis C patients


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Transaminases , Blood Platelets , Hyaluronic Acid , Hepacivirus , Hepatitis C , Meta-Analysis as Topic
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