Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3983879 Clinical Radiology 2009 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

AimTo evaluate the reliability of the bright liver (BL) echo pattern on ultrasound to detect histological steatosis in chronic cryptogenic hypertransaminasaemia (CCH) and hepatitis C virus (HCV)-related forms of hypertransaminasaemia.Materials and methodsOne hundred and fifty patients, 54 with CCH and 96 with HCV hypertransaminasaemia (76 genotype 1/2 and 20 genotype 3), were enrolled. Histological steatosis was measured as the percentage of hepatocytes involved. The reliability of the BL sign was estimated using the sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values.ResultsHistological steatosis was present in 102/150 patients (68%) divided into 59/96 (62%) in the HCV group and 43/54 (79.6%) in the CCH group (χ2 = 4.4; p = 0.035). In a multivariate analysis, the variable associated with the BL echo pattern was steatosis percentage (p = 0.0018). Steatosis percentage was higher in CCH group than in the HCV genotype 1/2 and 3 groups (p = 0.02). The sensitivity of the BL echo pattern was 88% in the CCH group [confidence interval (CI) 95% 74–95] versus 61% (CI 95% 44–73) in the HCV genotype 1/2 group. The CI indicates that ultrasound can provide evidence for steatosis in a statistically significant way in the CCH versus HCV genotype 1/2 patients. In the genotype 3 group, the sensitivity was high (90%), but the limited number of cases limited the statistical significance due to the high CI.ConclusionIn CCH the BL echo pattern has excellent reliability in diagnosing steatosis, better than in HCV hypertransaminasaemia because of the higher prevalence and extent of steatosis.

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