Quantifying and monitoring fibrosis in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease using dual-photon microscopy

Author:

Wang YanORCID,Wong Grace Lai-HungORCID,He Fang-Ping,Sun Jian,Chan Anthony Wing-Hung,Yang Jinlian,Shu Sally She-Ting,Liang Xieer,Tse Yee Kit,Fan Xiao-Tang,Hou Jinlin,Chan Henry Lik-Yuen,Wong Vincent Wai-SunORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveFibrosis stage is strongly associated with liver-related outcomes and is a key surrogate endpoint in drug trials for non-alcoholic steatohepatitis. Dual-photon microscopy allows automated quantification of fibrosis-related parameters (q-FPs) and may facilitate large-scale histological studies. We aim to validate the performance of q-FPs in a large histological cohort.Design344 patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) underwent 428 liver biopsies (240 had paired transient elastography examination). Fibrosis stage was scored using the NASH Clinical Research Network system, and q-FPs were measured by dual-photon microscopy using unstained slides. Patients were randomly assigned to the training and validation cohorts to test the performance of individual q-FPs and derive optimal cut-offs.ResultsOver 25 q-FPs had area under the receiver-operating characteristics curves >0.90 for different fibrosis stages. Among them, the perimeter of collagen fibres and number of long collagen fibres had the highest accuracy. At the best cut-offs, the two q-FPs had 88.3%–96.2% sensitivity and 78.1%–91.1% specificity for different fibrosis stages in the validation cohort. q-FPs and histological scoring had nearly identical correlations with liver stiffness measurement, suggesting that the accuracy of q-FPs approached that of histological assessment. Among patients with paired liver biopsies, changes in the same q-FPs were associated with changes in fibrosis stage. At a median follow-up of 5.6 years, baseline q-FPs predicted liver-related events.Conclusionq-FP is highly accurate in the assessment of fibrosis in NAFLD patients. This automated platform can be used in future studies as objective and reliable evaluation of histological fibrosis.

Funder

Guangzhou Science and Technology Program key projects

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Gastroenterology

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