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Longitudinal changes in liver fibrosis in children with sickle cell disease under- going chronic transfusion therapy

Journal Volume 75 - 2012
Issue Fasc.4 - Original articles
Author(s) J.L. Wolfe, R.A. Anders, S. Reddoch, K.B. Schwarz, W.J. Savage
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(1) Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition, Children's National Medical Center, Washington, DC ; (2) Department of Pathology, (3) Department of Pediatric Hematology, (4) Department of Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.

Background and study aims : The progression of liver injury from transfusional iron overload in sickle cell disease (SCD) is poorly understood. We sought to identify predictors liver fibrosis development over time. Patients and methods : We performed a retrospective cohort study of chronically transfused SCD patients who had = 2 serial liver biopsies. Core biopsies were scored for fibrosis in a blinded fashion. Primary analyses evaluated longitudinal changes in liver fibrosis and changes in surrogate markers. Secondary analyses determined the relationship between liver iron concentration (LIC) and serum biomarkers. Results : 26 people had = 2 serial biopsies for evaluation (n = 70 biopsies total). Fibrosis was Ishak grade 0 or 1 in all biopsies. Evaluation of the first 2 biopsies showed fibrosis regression (n = 6), development (n=2), persistence (n=1), and absence (n=17). There was no consistent association of fibrosis with LIC over time, or between changes in fibrosis status and surrogate markers. For predicting fibrosis on a cross-sectional basis, ALT and ferritin performed moderately (AUCs 0.80 and 0.63, respectively) but LIC performed poorly (AUC 0.30). The highest positive likelihood ratios for fibrosis were for ferritin cutoff of 5000 ng/mL (LR + 5.7) and ALT cutoff of 65 U/L (LR + 5.2). Conclusions : Liver fibrosis progression is minimal in chronical- ly transfused SCD. LIC does not correlate well with fibrosis devel- opment. We propose routine liver biopsies are not necessary com- ponents in the standard monitoring of chronically transfused SCD patients. (Acta gastroenterol. belg., 2012, 75, 419-424).

© Acta Gastro-Enterologica Belgica.
PMID 23402085