Review
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2016.
World J Gastrointest Pharmacol Ther. Feb 6, 2016; 7(1): 91-106
Published online Feb 6, 2016. doi: 10.4292/wjgpt.v7.i1.91
Table 1 Optimal cut-off values for liver stiffness measurement in different etiologies of chronic liver disease
Optimal cut-off LSM for F2Optimal cut-off LSM for F3Optimal cut-off for LSM F4Ref.
Chronic hepatitis C7.6 (5.1-10.1)10.9 (8.0-15.4)15.3 (11.9-26.5)[33]
Chronic hepatitis B7.0 (6.9-7.2)8.2 (7.3-9.0)11.3 (9.0-13.4)[33]
Alcoholic liver disease8.9 (2.8-46.4)10.3 (7.7-20.8)18.4 (12.2-75.0)[66]
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease7.0 (6.7-7.8)8.7 (7.1-10.4)10.3 (10.3-22.3)[35-37]
Cholestatic liver disease7.39.817.3[54]
Table 2 What the clinician needs to know about transient elastography (Fibroscan®)
1 Clinical indications for TE
Liver diseaseIndications for TEPotential clinical applications
Chronic liver diseaseTo assess for severity of fibrosisAssist in treatment decisions in CHC and CHB
Selection of patients for treatment trials
Decision to continue or stop MTX
To diagnose early cirrhosisCommence variceal screening and HCC surveillance, monitor for decompensation
Longitudinal assessment of fibrosisAssess for progression of fibrosis in untreated patients and for regression of fibrosis/cirrhosis in treated patients
Patients with NAFLDAssess severity of fibrosis and steatosis (with Fibroscan-CAP)Aggressive control of risk factors
Selection of patients for treatment trials
Selection of patients for liver biopsy
Post-liver transplantAssess for fibrosis in recurrent CHC post liver transplantAvoid protocol liver biopsies for diagnosis of fibrosis
Non-cirrhotic portal hypertensionExclude cirrhosisAssists in differentiating cirrhotic vs non-cirrhotic portal hypertension
Patients with cirrhosisPredict significant portal hypertension and risk of liver-related eventsStratify frequency of follow-up in low-risk vs high-risk cirrhotics
Predict absence of varicesAvoid/delay endoscopy screening in cirrhotics at low risk for varices
2 Conditions that affect accuracy of TE
ConditionHow it affects the TE resultWhat the clinician should do
Post-mealLSMs are elevated after meals due to increased hepatic venous flowPatients should fast for at least 3 h before TE measurement
Elevated ALTLSMs are elevated due to hepatic inflammationRepeat or delay TE till after ALT has returned to baseline/normal levels
Use ALT-based LSM cut-off values to interpret LSM result
Use probability-based LSM interpretation scores which account for ALT
Cardiac failureLSMs are elevated due to hepatic congestion in right heart failureRepeat or delay TE until after patient’s heart failure is treated
CholestasisLSMs are elevated due to increased stiffness from biliary dilatationRepeat or delay TE until after biliary obstruction is resolved
Operator experienceOperator inexperience may lead to higher rate of unsuccessful or invalid LSM resultsTE should be performed by operators with prior experience of at least 50-100 examinations
ObesityHigher rate of unsuccessful LSMs due to increased SCD because of increased subcutaneous fatUse XL probe if SCD > 3.4 cm (with the current Fibroscan 502 Touch®, the machine will automatically advise when the XL probe should be used)
If LSM is unsuccessful with XL probe, use alternative non-invasive test
AscitesHigh rate of unsuccessful LSM due to interruption of shear waves by ascitesUse alternative non-invasive test
Pregnancy, cardiac pacemaker, AICDSafety of TE in these conditions have not been assessedTE contraindicated
Table 3 Comparison of non-invasive modalities for assessment of fibrosis
Non-invasive testAdvantagesDisadvantages
Transient elastographyEasy to performRequires costly equipment
Painless and comfortableUnreliable in patients with severe obesity and ascites
Can be done in clinic or officeRequires technical expertise
Provides immediate results for clinicianRequires fasting
Well-validatedInterpretation of LSM result dependent on etiology, ALT, etc.
Can be performed reliably in obese patients with the use of XL probeOnly assesses part of the liver
Readily available in most centres
Serum markersEasy to performResults can be confounded by biochemical abnormalities
InexpensiveIndirect reflection of liver fibrosis
Does not require training or equipmentDoes not assess liver stiffness directly
Well-validatedSome tests are proprietary and are relatively costly
Easily repeatable
MREMulti-dimensional assessmentHigh cost
Able to assess whole liverLimited availability
Operator independenceCannot be performed in subjects with claustrophobia
Can be performed in obese patients and those with ascitesLong examination time
Can be integrated as part of a comprehensive MRI examinationCannot be performed in livers with iron overload
ARFI/SWEHigher success rate compared to TE (using M probe)Requires special equipment and technical expertise
Similar accuracy to TEOperator-dependent
Can be performed in obese patients and those with ascitesNot widely available
Can assess whole liver
Can assess specific part of the liver (i.e., region of interest)