Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts
Search in pages
Filter by Categories
Author’ response
Author’s reply
Authors' response
Authors#x2019; response
Book Received
Book Review
Book Reviews
Centenary Review Article
Clinical Image
Clinical Images
Commentary
Communicable Diseases - Original Articles
Correspondence
Correspondence, Letter to Editor
Correspondences
Correspondences & Authors’ Responses
Corrigendum
Critique
Current Issue
Editorial
Errata
Erratum
Health Technology Innovation
IAA CONSENSUS DOCUMENT
Innovations
Letter to Editor
Malnutrition & Other Health Issues - Original Articles
Media & News
Notice of Retraction
Obituary
Original Article
Original Articles
Perspective
Policy
Policy Document
Policy Guidelines
Policy, Review Article
Policy: Correspondence
Policy: Editorial
Policy: Mapping Review
Policy: Original Article
Policy: Perspective
Policy: Process Paper
Policy: Scoping Review
Policy: Special Report
Policy: Systematic Review
Policy: Viewpoint
Practice
Practice: Authors’ response
Practice: Book Review
Practice: Clinical Image
Practice: Commentary
Practice: Correspondence
Practice: Letter to Editor
Practice: Obituary
Practice: Original Article
Practice: Pages From History of Medicine
Practice: Perspective
Practice: Review Article
Practice: Short Note
Practice: Short Paper
Practice: Special Report
Practice: Student IJMR
Practice: Systematic Review
Pratice, Original Article
Pratice, Review Article
Pratice, Short Paper
Programme
Programme, Correspondence, Letter to Editor
Programme: Commentary
Programme: Correspondence
Programme: Editorial
Programme: Original Article
Programme: Originial Article
Programme: Perspective
Programme: Rapid Review
Programme: Review Article
Programme: Short Paper
Programme: Special Report
Programme: Status Paper
Programme: Systematic Review
Programme: Viewpoint
Protocol
Research Correspondence
Retraction
Review Article
Short Paper
Special Opinion Paper
Special Report
Special Section Nutrition & Food Security
Status Paper
Status Report
Strategy
Student IJMR
Systematic Article
Systematic Review
Systematic Review & Meta-Analysis
Viewpoint
White Paper
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts
Search in pages
Filter by Categories
Author’ response
Author’s reply
Authors' response
Authors#x2019; response
Book Received
Book Review
Book Reviews
Centenary Review Article
Clinical Image
Clinical Images
Commentary
Communicable Diseases - Original Articles
Correspondence
Correspondence, Letter to Editor
Correspondences
Correspondences & Authors’ Responses
Corrigendum
Critique
Current Issue
Editorial
Errata
Erratum
Health Technology Innovation
IAA CONSENSUS DOCUMENT
Innovations
Letter to Editor
Malnutrition & Other Health Issues - Original Articles
Media & News
Notice of Retraction
Obituary
Original Article
Original Articles
Perspective
Policy
Policy Document
Policy Guidelines
Policy, Review Article
Policy: Correspondence
Policy: Editorial
Policy: Mapping Review
Policy: Original Article
Policy: Perspective
Policy: Process Paper
Policy: Scoping Review
Policy: Special Report
Policy: Systematic Review
Policy: Viewpoint
Practice
Practice: Authors’ response
Practice: Book Review
Practice: Clinical Image
Practice: Commentary
Practice: Correspondence
Practice: Letter to Editor
Practice: Obituary
Practice: Original Article
Practice: Pages From History of Medicine
Practice: Perspective
Practice: Review Article
Practice: Short Note
Practice: Short Paper
Practice: Special Report
Practice: Student IJMR
Practice: Systematic Review
Pratice, Original Article
Pratice, Review Article
Pratice, Short Paper
Programme
Programme, Correspondence, Letter to Editor
Programme: Commentary
Programme: Correspondence
Programme: Editorial
Programme: Original Article
Programme: Originial Article
Programme: Perspective
Programme: Rapid Review
Programme: Review Article
Programme: Short Paper
Programme: Special Report
Programme: Status Paper
Programme: Systematic Review
Programme: Viewpoint
Protocol
Research Correspondence
Retraction
Review Article
Short Paper
Special Opinion Paper
Special Report
Special Section Nutrition & Food Security
Status Paper
Status Report
Strategy
Student IJMR
Systematic Article
Systematic Review
Systematic Review & Meta-Analysis
Viewpoint
White Paper
View/Download PDF

Translate this page into:

Editorial
140 (
2
); 160-162

Liver biopsy interpretation & the regression of hepatitis B virus related cirrhosis

Department of Immunology and Inflammation Humanitas Clinical and Research Center Via Manzoni 56 - 20089 Rozzano, Milan, Italy
Department of Pathology, University Hospital Leuven, Belgium

*For correspondence: fabio.grizzi@humanitasresearch.it

Licence

This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Disclaimer:
This article was originally published by Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd and was migrated to Scientific Scholar after the change of Publisher.

Globally, chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection affects over 350 million people, and up to 40 per cent of these may progress to cirrhosis, liver failure, or hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)12. India represents the second largest pool of chronic HBV infection worldwide with an estimated 40 million infected people3, and every year over 100,000 Indians die due to HBV–related disease and its complications4. Chronic HBV infection in India is acquired in childhood, presumably before 5 years of age, through horizontal transmission, although the prevalence of chronic HBV infection in pregnant females is 0.82 per cent and during pregnancy, HBV infection carries a risk of vertical (mother-to-child) transmission5. It is now generally accepted that the intrinsic characteristics of the HBV, the individual patient's characteristics and disease dynamics, and also the type of drugs used to treat the disease can all influence the treatment response and risk of relapse. The management of HBV has become more complex with the increasing use of long-term oral nucleotide analogue antiviral therapies, including lamivudine, adefovir dipivoxil, entecavir and telbivudine6. HBV is characterized by a high degree of genetic heterogeneity due to the use of a reverse transcriptase during viral replication. Thus, monitoring HBV genotypic resistance and shared resistant pathway pertaining to antiviral agents would help to optimize or rescue current antiviral therapies and avoid the outbreak of clinical deterioration7. There is also a lack of robust data for guiding optimal management including the selection of therapy, duration of treatment, potential antiviral side effects and the treatment of special populations. In addition, common risk factors for HCC include persistent hepatitis C viral infection, alcohol abuse, haemochromatosis or metabolic syndrome (non-alcoholic steatohepatitis or NASH)8. Steatohepatitic HCC has been recently recognized as a peculiar morphologic variant of HCC in non alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD)-associated cirrhosis and significantly associated with metabolic risk factors9. Today, levels of serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) represent a biomarker of hepatitis B severity and response to treatment. However, ALT levels may be of limited utility during the immune clearance phase of chronic hepatitis B (CHB), and can be influenced by the patient's age and weight, and by concomitant liver disease. In addition, a considerable proportion of patients with slight increase in ALT-levels have significant fibrosis.

Given the possibility of advanced liver disease, the ALT threshold for antiviral treatment needs to be identified. Recently, Marcellin et al10 assessed histological improvement (≥ 2point reduction in Knodell necroinflammatory score with no worsening of fibrosis) and regression of fibrosis (≥ 1 unit decrease by Ishak scoring system) in a series of patients with CHB treated with tenofovir disoproxil fumarate, a nucleotide analogue, inhibitor of HBV polymerase/reverse transcriptase and active against lamivudine-resistant HBV infection, during 4-5 years; 348 of the 489 patients underwent repeat liver biopsy. Liver histology showed improvement in inflammation and necrosis in almost all patients and a decrease in fibrosis in 51 per cent patients9. An impressive finding was a regression of cirrhosis, defined as a ≥ 1 unit decrease in Ishak score in 71 of the 96 patients (74%) of those with on initial biopsy a score of cirrhosis (Ishak 5 or 6). In 2011, Schiff et al11 investigated a subset of patients from phase III and long-term roll-over studies who received entecavir for at least three years, had advanced fibrosis or cirrhosis, and evaluable biopsies at baseline and after long-term treatment. They found that after approximately 6 years of cumulative entecavir therapy, all 10 patients showed improvement in liver histology and Ishak fibrosis score11. A reduction in Ishak fibrosis score to four or less was observed for all 4 patients who had cirrhosis at baseline. They concluded that CHB patients with advanced fibrosis or cirrhosis demonstrated histologic improvement and reversal of fibrosis and cirrhosis after long-term treatment with entecavir11. Using a computerized image analysis system, Traber et al12 have evaluated the effect of complex carbohydrate drugs that bind to galectin-3 protein, as well as galectin-1 using a model of hepatic fibrosis and cirrhosis in rats. They found that the two agents, galactoarabino -rhamnogalaturonan and galactomannan have a marked therapeutic effect on the collagen surface density (i.e. liver fibrosis) induced by thioacetamide treatment. In addition to a reduction in collagen amount, these agents reduced the bridging fibrosis and histological cirrhosis despite continued exposure to thioacetamide. Moreover, there was a significant reduction in portal hypertension. Therefore, it appears that treatment with these agents not only led to degradation of collagen and regression of histological findings of advanced fibrosis and cirrhosis, but also attenuated the pathophysiologic consequences of cirrhosis. Liver histology remains the best standard for diagnosing cirrhosis, assessing prognosis, and making therapeutic decisions13. The current scoring systems apply the same principles for describing the status of liver disease but, remarkably, none of these specifically relates to the amount of fibrosis14. Furthermore, the assigned scores are not measurements, i.e. assessments of a quantity, but shorthand labels of morphological descriptions: i.e. these are categories rather than arithmetically related numbers; that is, stage 2 is not half of stage 415. Moreover, a scoring system devised for one particular liver disease is not automatically applicable to a different aetiology16. A number of alternative and non-invasive tests containing serum markers, including serum aspartate aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase to platelet ratio index, Fibrosis 4, Forn's index, fibrometer, Hepascore, Shanghai Liver Fibrosis Group's index have been investigated17. These models are mainly based on indirect serum markers, which have no direct link with liver fibrosis, but reflect liver dysfunction or other phenomena caused by fibrosis. Goyal et al18 investigated transient elastography (Fibroscan®) and liver biopsy in 382 consecutive patients with HBV, and found that transient elastography accurately assessed fibrosis and could avoid liver biopsy in more than two third patients with HBV. The usefulness of transient elastography in assessing fibrosis remains, however, widely debated. It is expensive, operator-dependent and may be limited in subjects with narrow intercostal spaces, morbid obesity or significant ascites. Additionally, further studies comparing elasticity values of normal and pathologic tissues are needed to detect the diagnostic role of the recently proposed shear wave ultrasonographic elastography19. Quantitative computer-aided image and texture analysis of parametric apparent diffusion coefficient maps have been proposed as effective tools in quantifying liver fibrosis in routine practice202122. Liver biopsy may remain the reference method for identifying a state of cirrhosis, but a comprehensive study of chronic liver disease requires a combination of histological and clinical data that incorporate clinical endpoints such as the onset of complications of cirrhosis, portal pressure measurements and death as the “metric” of the fibrosis, which cannot be interchangeable with that of cirrhosis15212324. The challenging goal of cirrhosis reversal must take into account aspects other than fibrosis regression alone: i.e. architectural changes, vascular shunts, and liver cell regeneration. The development of effective anti-fibrotic therapies is now possible and the Government of India is also supporting planned State programmes for introducing new vaccines as part of routine immunization for hepatitis B4. However, there still remain several open questions, the first one being the importance of quantitative systemic thinking in medicine25 with emphasis on the importance of understanding the quantifiable determinants of the baseline scale of life, defining the average, idealized, healthy individual25, and as important second the present lack of a definitely reliable method of assessing reversal of cirrhosis in its different stages.

References

  1. , , . Hepatocellular carcinoma: epidemiology and molecular carcinogenesis. Gastroenterology. 2007;132:2557-76.
    [Google Scholar]
  2. , . Chronic hepatitis B. N Engl J Med. 2002;346:1682-3.
    [Google Scholar]
  3. , . Viral hepatitis in India. Clin Lab Med. 2012;32:159-74.
    [Google Scholar]
  4. , , , , , , . Hepatitis B vaccine in national immunization schedule: a preventive step in India. Hum Vaccin. 2011;7:1387-8.
    [Google Scholar]
  5. , , , , , . Hepatitis B prevalence during pregnancy. Indian pediatr. 2009;46:1005-8.
    [Google Scholar]
  6. , . Nucleoside/nucleotide analogue polymerase inhibitors in development. Clin liver Dis. 2013;17:105-10.
    [Google Scholar]
  7. , , , , , , . Profile of hepatitis B virus resistance mutations against nucleoside/nucleotide analogue treatment in Chinese patients with chronic hepatitis B. Virol J. 2013;10:313.
    [Google Scholar]
  8. , , , , , , . Viral genotypes and associated risk factors of hepatocellular carcinoma in India. Cancer biol med. 2012;9:172-81.
    [Google Scholar]
  9. , , , , . Steatohepatitic hepatocellular carcinoma, a morphologic indicator of associated metabolic risk factors: a study from India. Arc pathol lab med. 2013;137:961-6.
    [Google Scholar]
  10. , , , , , , . Regression of cirrhosis during treatment with tenofovir disoproxil fumarate for chronic hepatitis B: a 5-year open-label follow-up study. Lancet. 2013;381:468-75.
    [Google Scholar]
  11. , , , , , , . Long-term treatment with entecavir induces reversal of advanced fibrosis or cirrhosis in patients with chronic hepatitis B. Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2011;9:274-6.
    [Google Scholar]
  12. , , , , , , . Regression of fibrosis and reversal of cirrhosis in rats by galectin inhibitors in thioacetamide-induced liver disease. PLoS One. 2013;8:e75361.
    [Google Scholar]
  13. , , , . Liver biopsy. N Engl J med. 2001;344:495-500.
    [Google Scholar]
  14. , , , , , , . A systematic review of the quality of liver biopsy specimens. Am J Clin Pathol. 2006;125:710-21.
    [Google Scholar]
  15. , . On the reversal of liver cirrhosis: mystery or reality? Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol. 2012;39:401-3.
    [Google Scholar]
  16. , , . Advances in antifibrotic therapy. Expert rev gastroenterol hepatol. 2008;2:803-16.
    [Google Scholar]
  17. , , , , , , . Assessment of non-invasive models for liver fibrosis in chronic hepatitis B virus related liver disease patients in resource limited settings. Indian J Pathol Microbiol. 2013;56:196-9.
    [Google Scholar]
  18. , , , , , , . Fibroscan can avoid liver biopsy in Indian patients with chronic hepatitis B. J Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2013;28:1738-45.
    [Google Scholar]
  19. , , , , , . Quantitative assessment of the elasticity values of liver with shear wave ultrasonographic elastography. Indian J Med Res. 2013;137:911-5.
    [Google Scholar]
  20. , , , , , , . Quantification of collagen and elastic fibers using whole-slide images of liver biopsy specimens. Pathol Int. 2013;63:305-10.
    [Google Scholar]
  21. , . Liver tissue examination. J Hepatol. 2003;39(Suppl 1):S43-9.
    [Google Scholar]
  22. , , , , , , . Collagen proportionate area of liver tissue determined by digital image analysis in patients with HBV-related decompensated cirrhosis. Hepatobiliary Pancreat Dis Int. 2011;10:497-501.
    [Google Scholar]
  23. , . Comments on cirrhosis reversal. Dig liver Dis. 2005;37:909-16.
    [Google Scholar]
  24. , , , , . Now there are many (stages) where before there was one: In search of a pathophysiological classification of cirrhosis. Hepatology. 2010;51:1445-9.
    [Google Scholar]
  25. , . The importance of quantitative systemic thinking in medicine. Lancet. 2012;379:1551-9.
    [Google Scholar]

    Fulltext Views
    10

    PDF downloads
    9
    View/Download PDF
    Download Citations
    BibTeX
    RIS
    Show Sections
    Scroll to Top