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Does liver biopsy accurately measure fibrosis in Fontan‐associated liver disease? A comparison of liver biopsy pre–combined heart and liver transplant and liver explant post‐transplant
Author(s) -
Vaikunth Sumeet S.,
Higgins John P.,
Concepcion Waldo,
Haeffele Christiane,
Wright Gail E.,
Chen Sharon,
Lui George K.,
Daugherty Tami
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
clinical transplantation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.918
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 1399-0012
pISSN - 0902-0063
DOI - 10.1111/ctr.14120
Subject(s) - medicine , liver biopsy , biopsy , fibrosis , liver transplantation , liver disease , stage (stratigraphy) , fontan procedure , gastroenterology , pathology , transplantation , heart disease , paleontology , biology
The accuracy of liver biopsy to stage fibrosis due to Fontan‐associated liver disease (FALD) remains unclear. We compared the results of biopsy pre–combined heart and liver transplantation (CHLT) to the results of whole liver explant. Liver biopsy and explants from 15 Fontan patients (ages 16‐49, median 28 years) were retrospectively reviewed. Staging was as follows: stage 0: no fibrosis, stage 1: pericellular fibrosis, stage 2: bridging fibrosis, and stage 3: regenerative nodules. There is no stage 4. Clinical characteristics including Model of End‐stage Liver Disease eXcluding INR and Varices, Ascites, Splenomegaly, and Thrombocytopenia (VAST) scores were collected, and descriptive statistics and Mann‐Whitney U tests were used to analyze the data. All patients had biopsies with at least bridging fibrosis, and all had nodularity on explant; transjugular biopsy never overestimated fibrosis. Explant showed higher‐grade fibrosis (stage 3) than pre‐CHLT biopsy (stage 2) in 6 of 15 patients and equal grade of fibrosis (stage 3) in 9 of 15 patients. Though clinical characteristics varied significantly, VAST score was ≥2 in all but two patients. Transjugular liver biopsy does not overestimate and can underestimate fibrosis in Fontan patients undergoing CHLT, likely due to the patchy nature of fibrosis in FALD.