AI Article Synopsis

  • Current tools for assessing chronic liver disease risk are limited, prompting a study to evaluate the serum-based ELF test's ability to predict liver-related outcomes and advanced liver disease compared to traditional methods like liver biopsy.
  • The study followed 300 patients over an average of 6.1 years and found that those with higher ELF scores (≥9.8) experienced significantly more liver-related events and progressed to advanced fibrosis at a higher rate than those with lower scores.
  • The findings indicate that the ELF score is a valuable risk stratification tool for chronic liver disease patients, outperforming simpler scoring systems like APRI and FIB-4.

Article Abstract

Background And Aims: Current tools for risk stratification of chronic liver disease subjects are limited. We aimed to determine whether the serum-based ELF (Enhanced Liver Fibrosis) test predicted liver-related clinical outcomes, or progression to advanced liver disease, and to compare the performance of ELF to liver biopsy and non-invasive algorithms.

Methods: Three hundred patients with ELF scores assayed at the time of liver biopsy were followed up (median 6.1 years) for liver-related clinical outcomes (n = 16) and clear evidence of progression to advanced fibrosis (n = 18), by review of medical records and clinical data.

Results: Fourteen of 73 (19.2%) patients with ELF score indicative of advanced fibrosis (≥9.8, the manufacturer's cut-off) had a liver-related clinical outcome, compared to only two of 227 (<1%) patients with ELF score <9.8. In contrast, the simple scores APRI and FIB-4 would only have predicted subsequent decompensation in six and four patients respectively. A unit increase in ELF score was associated with a 2.53-fold increased risk of a liver-related event (adjusted for age and stage of fibrosis). In patients without advanced fibrosis on biopsy at recruitment, 55% (10/18) with an ELF score ≥9.8 showed clear evidence of progression to advanced fibrosis (after an average 6 years), whereas only 3.5% of those with an ELF score <9.8 (8/207) progressed (average 14 years). In these subjects, a unit increase in ELF score was associated with a 4.34-fold increased risk of progression.

Conclusions: The ELF score is a valuable tool for risk stratification of patients with chronic liver disease.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/liv.12896DOI Listing

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