Correlation between liver histology and novel magnetic resonance imaging in adult patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease - MRI accurately quantifies hepatic steatosis in NAFLD

Z Permutt, T-A Le, M R Peterson, E Seki, D A Brenner, C Sirlin, R Loomba, Z Permutt, T-A Le, M R Peterson, E Seki, D A Brenner, C Sirlin, R Loomba

Abstract

Background: Conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques that measure hepatic steatosis are limited by T1 bias, T(2)* decay and multi-frequency signal-interference effects of protons in fat. Newer MR techniques such as the proton density-fat fraction (PDFF) that correct for these factors have not been specifically compared to liver biopsy in adult patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD).

Aim: To examine the association between MRI-determined PDFF and histology-determined steatosis grade, and their association with fibrosis.

Methods: A total of 51 adult patients with biopsy-confirmed NAFLD underwent metabolic-biochemical profiling, MRI-determined PDFF measurement of hepatic steatosis and liver biopsy assessment according to NASH-CRN histological scoring system.

Results: The average MRI-determined PDFF increased significantly with increasing histology-determined steatosis grade: 8.9% at grade-1, 16.3% at grade-2, and 25.0% at grade-3 with P ≤ 0.0001 (correlation: r(2) = 0.56, P < 0.0001). Patients with stage-4 fibrosis, when compared with patients with stage 0-3 fibrosis, had significantly lower hepatic steatosis by both MRI-determined PDFF (7.6% vs. 17.8%, P < 0.005) and histology-determined steatosis grade (1.4 vs. 2.2, P < 0.05). NAFLD patients with grade 1 steatosis were more likely to have characteristics of advanced liver disease including higher average AST:ALT (0.87 vs. 0.60, P < 0.02), GGT (140 vs. 67, P < 0.01), and INR (1.06 vs. 0.99, P < 0.01), higher stage of fibrosis and hepatocellular ballooning.

Conclusions: MRI-determined proton density-fat fraction correlates with histology-determined steatosis grade in adults with NAFLD. Steatosis is non-linearly related to fibrosis progression. In patients with NAFLD, a low amount of hepatic steatosis on imaging does not necessarily indicate mild disease.

© 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-determined proton density fat fraction (PDFF) (%, y-axis as MRI-PDFF) is plotted by histology-determined steatosis grade (x-axis) using the NASH-CRN histological scoring system. The blue diamonds show each individual patients’ (N = 51) PDFF at their respective steatosis grade. The red diamonds represent the average PDFF seen at the specified steatosis grade. The average value of MRI-determined PDFF increases with increasing steatosis grade: at steatosis grade 1, average fat fraction is 8.9%, at grade-2 it is 16.3%, and at grade-3 it is 25.0%, and comparisons between all groups are statistically significant, P-value ≤ 0.0001. MRI PDFF increased with increasing steatosis grade: r2 = 0.56 P < 0.0001.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Fibrosis stage (0–4) determined by liver biopsy is seen on the x-axis while average histology-determined steatosis grade (blue) and average MRI-determined proton density fat fraction (red) are seen on the y-axis with scale on the left and right, respectively. Standard error bars are shown. Average MRI-PDFF and histology-determined steatosis grade remain relatively stable at fibrosis stage 0–3, but drop significantly at stage-4 (cirrhosis). Those patients with advanced (stage-4) fibrosis on liver biopsy had lower average MRI-PDFF than patients with lesser (stages 0–3) fibrosis (7.6% vs. 17.8%, P < 0.005) and lower average histology-determined steatosis grade (1.4 vs. 2.2, P = 0.03).

Source: PubMed

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