Non-invasive screening for liver fibrosis by acoustic radiation force impulse in patients with ciliopathies

被引:0
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作者
Johanna Bresch [1 ]
Jens König [2 ]
Martin Konrad [2 ]
Sabine Kollmann [2 ]
Mareike Dahmer-Heath [2 ]
Hauke Sebastian Heinzow [1 ]
Michael Praktiknjo [3 ]
Jonel Trebicka [1 ]
Carsten Bergmann [1 ]
Hartmut H-J Schmidt [4 ]
Bernhard Schlevogt [5 ]
机构
[1] Muenster University Hospital,Department of Medicine B
[2] Muenster University Hospital,Department of General Pediatrics
[3] Brüderkrankenhaus Trier,Department of Medicine IV, Faculty of Medicine
[4] Medizinische Genetik Mainz,Department of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Transplant Medicine
[5] Limbach Genetics,Department of Gastroenterology and Endoscopy
[6] Medical Center-University of Freiburg,undefined
[7] University Hospital Essen,undefined
[8] Medical Center Osnabrueck,undefined
关键词
Ciliopathies; Congenital hepatic fibrosis; Liver elastography; Liver stiffness measurement; Spleen stiffness measurement;
D O I
10.1038/s41598-025-96246-6
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Primary cilia are antenna-like structures on the surface of epithelial cells involved in multiple signaling pathways. Their malfunction can cause a heterogenous group of diseases called ciliopathies with a broad spectrum of organ involvements, including liver fibrosis. The aim of this exploratory study was to evaluate elastography measurement via ultrasound based acoustic radiation force impulse imaging (ARFI) as a screening tool for liver fibrosis in ciliopathies. In a prospective cohort of 51 patients with ciliopathies (aged between 2 months and 66 years) from the NEOCYST registry stiffness of the right liver lobe and spleen was measured via ARFI and results were then compared with laboratory parameters, endoscopic, ultrasonographic and histological findings. ARFI screening of the liver identified 27 patients without increased liver stiffness suggesting no or insignificant fibrosis, 11 with intermediate fibrosis, and 12 with liver fibrosis F4. Four patients showed increased spleen stiffness in ARFI. In all 10 patients with histologically confirmed fibrosis, ARFI results perfectly matched fibrosis stages. In the ARFI-based overall fibrosis subgroup, ALT, AST, GGT and spleen size were significantly increased, whereas platelets were significantly decreased compared to the no fibrosis subgroup. Normal GGT excluded ARFI-defined F4 fibrosis (negative predictive value 100%). Gene variants in PKHD1, TMEM67, and TULP3 were primarily detected in our patients with liver fibrosis whereas NPHP1 and HNF1B were not associated with increased liver stiffness. ARFI is a valuable screening tool for the detection of liver involvement in ciliopathies and may be useful in addition to laboratory and clinical parameters alone.
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