What is the criterion for differentiating chronic hepatitis from compensated cirrhosis? A prospective study comparing ultrasonography and percutaneous liver biopsy.

BACKGROUND/AIMS/METHODS The diagnosis of cirrhosis is currently based on percutaneous liver biopsy, although this procedure may give rise to false negative results. This prospective study blindly investigates the accuracy of an ultrasonographic score, derived from liver, spleen and portal vein features, in predicting the final diagnosis in 212 patients with compensated chronic liver disease undergoing percutaneous liver biopsy. RESULTS Taking biopsy as the standard, the ultrasonographic score differed significantly between chronic hepatitis (39+/-33) and cirrhosis (100+/-35) (p<0.0001). Discriminant analysis with stepwise forward selection of the variables identified liver surface nodularity and portal flow velocity as independently associated with the diagnosis of cirrhosis (p<0.005), and a score based on these two variables correctly identified cirrhosis in 82.2% of cases. One or both of these abnormalities were also found in 27/32 patients who were diagnosed as having cirrhosis at ultrasound, but were not cirrhotic histologically. Eight of these 32 cases developed signs of decompensated liver disease and/or portal hypertension in the subsequent 6-month follow-up, thus supporting the diagnosis of cirrhosis. CONCLUSIONS Our data suggest that ultrasound is accurate in predicting the final diagnosis in patients with compensated chronic liver disease and may identify cirrhosis even in the absence of a typical histopathological pattern. However, neither percutaneous liver biopsy nor ultrasonography can be assumed to be the definitive criterion for the diagnosis of compensated cirrhosis.

[1]  D Zatari,et al.  In vivo liver differentiation by ultrasound using an artificial neural network. , 1994, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[2]  J. Hoofnagle,et al.  Classification of chronic hepatitis: Diagnosis, grading and staging , 1994, Hepatology.

[3]  K. Okuda Early recognition of hepatocellular carcinoma , 1986, Hepatology.

[4]  N. Sanford,et al.  Is ultrasonography useful in the assessment of diffuse parenchymal liver disease? , 1985, Gastroenterology.

[5]  A. Sonnenberg,et al.  Sonographic measurements of the normal liver, spleen, pancreas, and portal vein. , 1983, Radiology.

[6]  L. Bolondi,et al.  Timing of the first variceal hemorrhage in cirrhotic patients: Prospective evaluation of doppler flowmetry, endoscopy and clinical parameters , 1994, Hepatology.

[7]  J. Durbec,et al.  [Evaluation of ultrasonography in the diagnosis of cirrhosis. Retrospective studies of 100 consecutive tests]. , 1983, Gastroenterologie clinique et biologique.

[8]  C A Riely,et al.  Ultrasonography of alcoholic liver disease with histological correlation. , 1981, Radiology.

[9]  S. Sherlock,et al.  Diseases of the Liver and Biliary System , 1955 .

[10]  B. Maharaj,et al.  SAMPLING VARIABILITY AND ITS INFLUENCE ON THE DIAGNOSTIC YIELD OF PERCUTANEOUS NEEDLE BIOPSY OF THE LIVER , 1986, The Lancet.

[11]  I. Vido,et al.  Korrelation des laparoskopischen und histologischen Befundes bei chronischer Hepatitis und Leberzirrhose , 1969 .

[12]  L. Beretta,et al.  Cirrhosis: diagnosis with sonographic study of the liver surface. , 1989, Radiology.

[13]  N. Robert,et al.  Diagnosis of cirrhosis based on regional changes in hepatic morphology: a radiological and pathological analysis. , 1980, Radiology.

[14]  T. Koga,et al.  Correlation between sectional area of the spleen by ultrasonic tomography and actual volume of the removed spleen , 1979, Journal of clinical ultrasound : JCU.

[15]  G. Ferraioli,et al.  Interobserver and interquipment variability of echo‐doppler examination of the portal vein: Effect of a cooperative training program , 1995, Hepatology.

[16]  A. Joseph,et al.  Comparison of liver histology with ultrasonography in assessing diffuse parenchymal liver disease. , 1991, Clinical radiology.

[17]  K. Okuda,et al.  Portal venous hemodynamics in chronic liver disease: effects of posture change and exercise. , 1985, Radiology.

[18]  C. Barthélémy,et al.  Valeur de l'ultrasonographie dans le diagnostic des cirrhoses. Etude prospective de 128 patients , 1985 .

[19]  L. Bolondi,et al.  Value of measurement of mean portal flow velocity by Doppler flowmetry in the diagnosis of portal hypertension. , 1992, Journal of hepatology.

[20]  D. F. Morrison,et al.  Multivariate Statistical Methods , 1968 .

[21]  K. Suzuki,et al.  Evaluation of structural change in diffuse liver disease with frequency domain analysis of ultrasound , 1993, Hepatology.

[22]  J. Boyer,et al.  Outpatient Liver Biopsy: How Safe Is It? , 1993, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[23]  P. Schlichting,et al.  Reproducibility of liver biopsy diagnosis in relation to the size of the specimen. , 1980, Scandinavian journal of gastroenterology.

[24]  L. Bolondi,et al.  Ultrasonography in the diagnosis of portal hypertension: diminished response of portal vessels to respiration. , 1982, Radiology.

[25]  M. Colombo,et al.  Ultrasound-assisted percutaneous liver biopsy: superiority of the Tru-Cut over the Menghini needle for diagnosis of cirrhosis. , 1988, Gastroenterology.

[26]  J. Bordas,et al.  A comparison of the accuracy of peritoneoscopy and liver biopsy in the diagnosis of cirrhosis , 1974, Gut.