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- Title
Liver Stiffness Measured by 2‐Dimensional Shear Wave Elastography: Prospective Evaluation of Healthy Volunteers and Patients With Liver Cirrhosis.
- Authors
Petzold, Golo; Hofer, Johannes; Ellenrieder, Volker; Neesse, Albrecht; Kunsch, Steffen
- Abstract
Objectives: We aimed to establish normal values for liver stiffness measurement, performed by 2‐dimensional shear wave elastography (LOGIQ E9; GE Healthcare, Wauwatosa, WI), in healthy volunteers, patients with nonhepatic morbidities, and patients with histologically confirmed liver cirrhosis. Methods: A total of 175 participants were included between July 2016 and February 2018. Three cohorts were analyzed: healthy volunteers (n = 68), patients with healthy livers but nonhepatic morbidities (n = 57), and patients with liver cirrhosis (n = 50). Liver stiffness measurement was performed by 2 observers with different levels of experience to determine interobserver agreement. Results: Of the 175 participants included, 91 were male, and the mean age ± SD was 44.4 ± 19.4 years. The success rate for 175 liver stiffness measurements was 95.4%. The number of unsuccessful measurements was significantly higher in the liver cirrhosis cohort (P = .04). The interobserver agreement was excellent (intraclass correlation coefficient, 0.87). Liver stiffness in the healthy‐liver patient cohort (4.93 ± 0.83 kPa) was not significantly different from that in the healthy‐volunteer cohort (5.19 ± 1.03 kPa; P = .13). Apart from male sex in the healthy‐volunteer cohort, age, body mass index, mild steatosis, and nonhepatic morbidities had no significant impact on liver stiffness. Liver stiffness values in participants without liver disease (healthy volunteers and healthy‐liver patients; n = 125) ranged from 3.62 to 7.02 kPa (2.5th–97.5th percentiles). Notably, there was no overlap of liver stiffness measurements between the patients without liver disease and the cirrhosis cohort (13.29 ± 3.27 kPa [7.76–19.49 kPa]). Conclusions: Liver stiffness values in healthy individuals vary widely and are not dependent on age, body mass index, or specific nonhepatic comorbidities. Liver stiffness values within the normal range can noninvasively rule out cirrhosis, as liver stiffness is significantly higher in cirrhotic patients (P < .001). Two‐dimensional shear wave elastography has excellent interobserver agreement.
- Subjects
CIRRHOSIS of the liver; LIVER; REFERENCE values; SHEAR waves; ELASTOGRAPHY
- Publication
Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine, 2019, Vol 38, Issue 7, p1769
- ISSN
0278-4297
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/jum.14866