Background and aims: Non-invasive assessment of liver fibrosis is important in the management of liver disease. EUS-guided shear wave elastography (EUS-SWE) is a newer technology that can measure liver stiffness, thereby estimating hepatic fibrosis. There is limited data comparing EUS-SWE to vibration controlled transient elastography (VCTE) using liver biopsy as the gold standard, and the reproducibility of EUS-SWE measurements is not known.
Methods: 52 patients referred for EUS-guided liver biopsy (EUS-LB) were prospectively enrolled. Patients first underwent VCTE, then 2 consecutive EUS-SWE measurements done first in the left and then another 2 in the right. Bilobar EUS-LB was then done. Receiver operating characteristic curves were developed to compare EUS-SWE to VCTE and correlate to histology. Analysis was done to determine EUS-SWE variability in paired measurements for each lobe and between right and left liver lobes.
Results: The most common indication for EUS-LB was non-alcoholic steatohepatitis fibrosis staging in 46% of patients. Right lobe SWE had a strong correlation with fibrosis stage ρ = 0.571 (P < .0001) whereas left lobe EUS-SWE had a moderate correlation ρ = 0.368 (P < .0079). Both EUS-SWE and VCTE were similar for discrimination of all stages of fibrosis based on empiric ROC curves. However, the variance between paired consecutive EUS-SWE measurements was 3.5 times higher in the left lobe compared to the right lobe (P < .0001).
Conclusion: EUS-SWE provides an assessment of hepatic fibrosis comparable to VCTE. EUS-SWE in the left lobe has 3.5 times higher variance between consecutive measurements compared to the right.
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