Cui XW, Friedrich-Rust M, Molo CD, Ignee A, Schreiber-Dietrich D, Dietrich CF. Liver elastography, comments on EFSUMB elastography guidelines 2013. World J Gastroenterol 2013; 19(38): 6329-6347 [PMID: 24151351 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v19.i38.6329]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Christoph F Dietrich, Professor, Department of Internal Medicine, Caritas-Krankenhaus Bad Mergentheim, Uhlandstr. 7, 97980 Bad Mergentheim, Germany. christoph.dietrich@ckbm.de
Research Domain of This Article
Radiology, Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
Article-Type of This Article
Diagnostic Advances
Open-Access Policy of This Article
This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
World J Gastroenterol. Oct 14, 2013; 19(38): 6329-6347 Published online Oct 14, 2013. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v19.i38.6329
Table 1 Examples of studies
Title
Comment
Ref.
Univariate approach
Elastographic assessment of liver fibrosis in children: A prospective single center experience
Pearson’s correlation
[21]
Is it better to use two elastographic methods for liver fibrosis assessment?
Spearman rank correlation
[22]
Is ARFI elastography reliable for predicting fibrosis severity in chronic HCV hepatitis?
Spearman rank correlation
[23]
Factors that influence the correlation of acoustic radiation force impulse, elastography with liver fibrosis
Spearman rank correlation
[24]
Liver stiffness measurement using acoustic radiation force impulse elastography and effect of necroinflammation
Pearson product-moment correlation
[25]
Multivariate approach
Liver stiffness measurements in patients with different stages of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease: Diagnostic performance and clinicopathological correlation
Spearman’s correlation (no attention paid to Bonferroni or alpha correction)
[26]
6 factors (higher age, serum albumin, serum AST, serum cholesterol, diabetes mellitus, LSM), LSM is the only independent predictor of advanced fibrosis (odds ratio = 1.47, 95%CI: 1.23-1.77, P < 0.001)
Assessment of liver fibrosis using transient elastography in patients with alcoholic liver disease
Spearman’s correlation (with Bonferroni test). In multivariate analysis including fibrosis, HAH, and steatosis, fibrosis was the only histological parameter significantly correlated with LSM
[27]
FibroScan and ultrasonography in the prediction of hepatic fibrosis in patients with chronic viral hepatitis
Pearson correlation (no attention paid to Bonferroni or alpha correction)
[28]
12 factors. Multivariate analysis showed that LSM positively correlates with hepatic fibrosis, necro-inflammatory activity and ultrasound scores
Performance of unidimensional transient elastography in staging non-alcoholic steatohepatitis
Spearman’s correlation (no attention paid to Bonferroni or alpha correction)
[29]
4 factors (fibrosis, ballooning, Lobular inflammation, steatosis). Multivariate analysis found fibrosis as the only factor influencing independently liver stiffness in NASH patients
Table 2 Mean shear wave velocities (VirtualTouch values) of the left and right liver lobes (mean ± SD)
Citation: Cui XW, Friedrich-Rust M, Molo CD, Ignee A, Schreiber-Dietrich D, Dietrich CF. Liver elastography, comments on EFSUMB elastography guidelines 2013. World J Gastroenterol 2013; 19(38): 6329-6347