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Prognostic value of Ishak fibrosis stage: Findings from the hepatitis C antiviral long‐term treatment against cirrhosis trial
Author(s) -
Everhart James E.,
Wright Elizabeth C.,
Goodman Zachary D.,
Dienstag Jules L.,
Hoefs John C.,
Kleiner David E.,
Ghany Marc G.,
Mills A. Scott,
Nash S. Russell,
Govindarajan Sugantha,
Rogers Thomas E.,
Greenson Joel K.,
Brunt Elizabeth M.,
Bonkovsky Herbert L.,
Morishima Chihiro,
Litman Heather J.
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
hepatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.488
H-Index - 361
eISSN - 1527-3350
pISSN - 0270-9139
DOI - 10.1002/hep.23315
Subject(s) - medicine , gastroenterology , cirrhosis , liver biopsy , hepatocellular carcinoma , biopsy , stage (stratigraphy) , fibrosis , hepatitis c , liver transplantation , hepatology , transplantation , paleontology , biology
Studies of the prognostic value of Ishak fibrosis stage are lacking. We used multi‐year follow‐up of the Hepatitis C Antiviral Long‐Term Treatment Against Cirrhosis (HALT‐C) Trial to determine whether individual Ishak fibrosis stages predicted clinical outcomes in patients with chronic hepatitis C. Baseline liver biopsy specimens from 1050 patients with compensated chronic hepatitis C who had failed combination peginterferon and ribavirin were reviewed by a panel of expert hepatopathologists. Fibrosis was staged with the Ishak scale (ranging from 0 = no fibrosis to 6 = cirrhosis). Biopsy fragmentation and length as well as number of portal tracts were recorded. We compared rates of prespecified clinical outcomes of hepatic decompensation and hepatocellular carcinoma across individual Ishak fibrosis stages. Of 1050 biopsy specimens, 25% were fragmented, 63% longer than 1.5 cm, 69% larger than 10 mm 2 , and 75% had 10 or more portal tracts. Baseline laboratory markers of liver disease severity were worse and the frequency of esophageal varices higher with increasing Ishak stage ( P < 0.0001). The 6‐year cumulative incidence of first clinical outcome was 5.6% for stage 2, 16.1% for stage 3, 19.3% for stage 4, 37.8% for stage 5, and 49.3% for stage 6. Among nonfragmented biopsy specimens, the predictive ability of Ishak staging was enhanced; however, no association was observed between Ishak stage and outcomes for fragmented biopsy specimens because of high rates of outcomes for patients with noncirrhotic stages. Similar results were observed with liver transplantation or liver‐related death as the outcome. Conclusion : Ishak fibrosis stage predicts clinical outcomes, need for liver transplantation, and liver‐related death in patients with chronic hepatitis C. Patients with fragmented biopsy specimens with low Ishak stage may be understaged histologically. (H EPATOLOGY 2010;51:585–594.)

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