PTU-079 Effect of Inflammation on Liver Stiffness in Active Autoimmune Liver Disease: A Simultaneous Biopsy-Controlled Study Using Acoustic Radiation Force Impulse (ARFI) Elastography

Gut ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 65 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. A92.2-A93
Author(s):  
DI Sherman ◽  
W Fateen ◽  
M Jagtiani Sangwaiya ◽  
P Tadrous ◽  
P Shorvon
2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 22-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Buendía-Fuentes ◽  
J. L. Melero-Ferrer ◽  
D. Plaza-López ◽  
J. Rueda-Soriano ◽  
A. Osa-Saez ◽  
...  

Background: Patients who have undergone the Fontan procedure are at risk of developing hepatic dysfunction. However, broad recommendations regarding liver monitoring are limited. The purpose of this study was to characterize the frequency of liver disease in adult Fontan patients using multimodality imaging (hepatic magnetic resonance imaging [MRI], acoustic radiation force impulse [ARFI] elastography, or hepatic ultrasound). Methods: In a prospective cross-sectional analysis of adult patients palliated with a Fontan procedure, hepatic MRI, ARFI, and hepatic ultrasound were used to assess for liver disease. The protocol compared (1) varying prevalence of liver disease based on each imaging technique, (2) agreement between different techniques, and (3) association between noninvasive imaging diagnosis of liver disease and clinical variables, including specific liver disease biomarkers. Results: Thirty-seven patients were enrolled. The ARFI results showed high wave propagation velocity in 35 patients (94.6%). All patients had some abnormality in the hepatic MRI. Specifically, 8 patients (21.6%) showed signs of chronic liver disease, 10 patients (27%) had significant liver fibrosis, and 27 patients (73%) had congestion. No correlation was found between liver stiffness measured as propagation velocity and hepatic MRI findings. Only 7 patients had an abnormal hepatic ultrasound study. Conclusions: There is an inherent liver injury in adult Fontan patients. Signs of liver disease were observed in most patients by both hepatic MRI and ARFI elastography but not by ultrasound imaging. Increased liver stiffness did not identify specific disease patterns from MRI, supporting the need for multimodality imaging to characterize liver disease in Fontan patients.


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