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Article Dans Une Revue Hepatology (Baltimore, Md.) Année : 2020

Liver stiffness by transient elastography to detect porto-sinusoidal vascular liver disease with portal hypertension

Résumé

OBJECTIVE: Porto-sinusoidal vascular liver disease (PSVD) is a rare cause of portal hypertension. PSVD is still often misdiagnosed as cirrhosis, emphasizing the need to improve PSVD diagnosis strategies. Data on liver stiffness measurement using transient elastography (TE-LSM) in PSVD are limited. The aim of this study was to evaluate the accuracy of TE-LSM to discriminate PSVD from cirrhosis in patients with signs of portal hypertension. Retrospective multicenter study comparing TE-LSM in patients with PSVD, according to Vascular Liver Disease Interest Group criteria, with patients with compensated biopsy-proven cirrhosis associated with alcohol (n = 117), HCV infection (n = 110), or NAFLD (n = 46). All patients had at least one sign of portal hypertension among gastroesophageal varices, splenomegaly, portosystemic collaterals, history of ascites, or platelet count < 150 × 109 CONCLUSIONS: This study including a total of 155 patients with PSVD and 273 patients with cirrhosis demonstrates that TE-LSM < 10 kPa strongly suggests PSVD in patients with signs of portal hypertension. Conversely, when TE-LSM is >20 kPa, PSVD is highly unlikely.
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Dates et versions

hal-04429257 , version 1 (31-01-2024)

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Laure Elkrief, Marie Lazareth, Sylvie Chevret, Valerie Paradis, Marta Magaz, et al.. Liver stiffness by transient elastography to detect porto-sinusoidal vascular liver disease with portal hypertension. Hepatology (Baltimore, Md.), 2020, Hepatology (Baltimore, Md.), ⟨10.1002/hep.31688⟩. ⟨hal-04429257⟩
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