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Dr. Enas Sebaay Ahmed Mustafa :: Publications:

Title:
Assessment of liver fibrosis in Egyptian chronic hepatitis B patients A comparative study including 5 noninvasive indexes
Authors: Mohammed Tag-Adeen, Maha Zeinelabedin Omar, Fatma Mohamed Abd-Elsalam, Ali Hasaneen, Mohamed Ahmed Mohamed, Hala Mohamed Elfeky, Ebada Mohamed Said, Badawy Abdul-Aziz
Year: 2018
Keywords: AAR, APRI, chronic hepatitis B, Fib-4, noninvasive indexes, RPR, S-index
Journal: Medicine
Volume: 97
Issue: Not Available
Pages: 7
Publisher: Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc
Local/International: International
Paper Link:
Full paper Enas Sebaay Ahmed Mustafa_Assessment_of_liver_fibrosis_in_Egyptian_chronic.12.pdf
Supplementary materials Not Available
Abstract:

Fibrosis assessment in chronic hepatitis B (CHB) is essential for prediction of long-term prognosis and proper treatment decision. This study was conducted to assess predictability of 5 simple noninvasive fibrosis indexes in comparison to liver biopsy in CHB patients. A total of 200 CHB adult Egyptian patients were consecutively included in this study, all were subjected to liver biopsy with staging of fibrosis using METAVIR scoring system. Fibrosis indexes including S-index, red cell distribution width to platelets ratio index (RPR), fibrosis-4 index (Fib-4), AST to platelets ratio index (APRI), and AST/ALT ratio index (AAR) were compared to biopsy result and their predictabilities for the different fibrosis stages were assessed using area under receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) analysis. S-index showed the highest AUROCs for predicting fibrosis among the studied indexes. AUROCs of S-index, RPR, Fib-4, APRI, and AAR were: 0.81, 0.67, 0.70, 0.68, and 0.60 for prediction of significant fibrosis (F2–F4), 0.90, 0.66, 0.68, 0.67, and 0.57 for advanced fibrosis (F3–F4), and 0.96, 0.62, 0.61, 0.57, and 0.53 for cirrhosis (F4), respectively. The optimal S-index cutoff for ruling in significant fibrosis was ≥0.3 with 94% specificity, 87% PPV, and 68% accuracy, while that for ruling out significant fibrosis was

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