Friday, July 15, 2011

Liver stiffness diminishes with antiviral response in chronic hepatitis C

Liver stiffness diminishes with antiviral response in chronic hepatitis C

C. Hézode1,2,†, L. Castéra3,†, F. Roudot-Thoraval2,4, M. Bouvier-Alias2,5, I. Rosa6, D. Roulot7, V. Leroy8, A. Mallat1,2, J.-M. Pawlotsky2,5Article first published online: 13 JUL 2011

DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2036.2011.04765.x
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Summary
Background Transient elastography measures liver stiffness, which correlates with the hepatic fibrosis stage and has excellent accuracy for the diagnosis of cirrhosis in patients with chronic hepatitis C.

Aim To prospectively assess the kinetics of liver stiffness in treated patients with chronic hepatitis C and compare them with the viral kinetics on treatment and with the final outcome of therapy.

Methods
91 patients with chronic hepatitis C with significant fibrosis (>7.0 kPa) at baseline were included. They received therapy with pegylated interferon- and ribavirin. The kinetics of liver stiffness were characterized during therapy and thereafter by means of Fibroscan®, and compared with the virological responses at weeks 4, 12, 24, end of treatment and 12 and 24 weeks after.

Results
A significant liver stiffness decrease was observed during therapy, which continued after treatment only in patients who achieved a sustained virological response. In this group, the median intra-patient decrease relative to baseline at the end of follow-up was −3.4 kPa, vs−1.8 kPa in the patients who did not achieve an SVR. Similar dynamics were observed in cirrhotic and non-cirrhotic patients. In multivariate analysis, only the SVR was associated with long-term improvement of liver stiffness (odds ratio: 3.10; 95% confidence interval: 1.20–8.02, P = 0.019).

Conclusions
In patients with advanced fibrosis at the start of therapy, liver stiffness is significantly reduced during treatment, but improvement continues off treatment only in patients who achieve a sustained virological response. Liver stiffness assessment earlier than 6 months after the end of therapy does not appear to be clinically meaningful.

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