Systematic review and individual-patient-data meta-analysis of non-invasive fibrosis markers for chronic hepatitis B in Africa

Author:

Johannessen AsgeirORCID,Stockdale Alexander J.ORCID,Henrion Marc Y. R.ORCID,Okeke Edith,Seydi Moussa,Wandeler Gilles,Sonderup Mark,Spearman C. WendyORCID,Vinikoor Michael,Sinkala Edford,Desalegn HailemichaelORCID,Fall Fatou,Riches Nicholas,Davwar Pantong,Duguru Mary,Maponga TongaiORCID,Taljaard Jantjie,Matthews Philippa C.,Andersson MoniqueORCID,Mboup Souleyman,Sombie Roger,Shimakawa YusukeORCID,Lemoine Maud

Abstract

AbstractIn sub-Saharan Africa, simple biomarkers of liver fibrosis are needed to scale-up hepatitis B treatment. We conducted an individual participant data meta-analysis of 3,548 chronic hepatitis B patients living in eight sub-Saharan African countries to assess the World Health Organization-recommended aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio index and two other fibrosis biomarkers using a Bayesian bivariate model. Transient elastography was used as a reference test with liver stiffness measurement thresholds at 7.9 and 12.2kPa indicating significant fibrosis and cirrhosis, respectively. At the World Health Organization-recommended cirrhosis threshold (>2.0), aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio index had sensitivity (95% credible interval) of only 16.5% (12.5–20.5). We identified an optimised aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio index rule-in threshold (>0.65) for liver stiffness measurement >12.2kPa with sensitivity and specificity of 56.2% (50.5–62.2) and 90.0% (89.0–91.0), and an optimised rule-out threshold (<0.36) with sensitivity and specificity of 80.6% (76.1–85.1) and 64.3% (62.8–65.8). Here we show that the World Health Organization-recommended aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio index threshold is inappropriately high in sub-Saharan Africa; improved rule-in and rule-out thresholds can optimise treatment recommendations in this setting.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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