Background: Liver stiffness measurement (LSM) by transient elastography is a noninvasive method for the diagnosis of hepatic fibrosis. The impact of hepatic steatosis on LSM remains to be explored.
Aim: To determine whether LSM is affected by hepatic steatosis in patients with chronic hepatitis B (CHB).
Methods: Consecutive patients with biopsy-proven CHB were prospectively enrolled. Hepatic steatosis was classified by pathology as none (S0, <5%), mild (S1, 5%-33%), and moderate-severe (S2-3, >33%), and quantitatively by controlled attenuation parameter (CAP) as CAP S0 (≤247 dB/m), CAP S1 (248-267 dB/m) and CAP S2-3 (≥268 dB/m). Liver fibrosis was assessed by METAVIR classification and noninvasively by LSM.
Results: The prevalence of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (n = 223) in CHB patients (n = 593) was 37.6%. Forty-eight belonged to S2-3 and 127 belonged to CAP S2-3. In patients without significant fibrosis (F0-1), the median LSM (kPa) was 7.4 in S2-3 and 7.1 in CAP S2-3, which was significantly higher than that in S0/S1 (P = 0.005) and CAP S0/S1 (P = 0.003). No significant difference was found in significant fibrosis (F2-4). For LSM identifying significant fibrosis (F2-4), the negative predictive value was higher in CHB patients with CAP ≥ 268 compared to those with CAP < 268 (0.81 vs 0.73); the positive predictive value was lower in CAP ≥ 268 than its counterpart (0.65 vs 0.76).
Conclusions: Moderate-severe steatosis increased the LSM value in CHB patients without significant fibrosis. A CAP ≥ 268 did not affect LSM for ruling out, but it slightly affected LSM for ruling in significant fibrosis.
Trial registration: ChiCTR-DDT-13003983.
© 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.