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The utility of P-I-R classification in predicting the on-treatment histological and clinical outcomes of patients with hepatitis B and advanced liver fibrosis. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The P-I-R classification assesses liver fibrosis changes beyond traditional staging, aiding in the prediction of clinical outcomes for chronic hepatitis B patients.
  • In a study of 727 patients who underwent entecavir treatment for over 7 years, significant shifts in fibrosis classification were observed, with more patients moving to regressive cases post-treatment.
  • Patients categorized as progressive had a much higher risk of liver-related events compared to regressive cases, suggesting the P-I-R classification is valuable for evaluating liver health and prognosis.

Article Abstract

Background And Aims: The predominantly progressive, indeterminate, and predominantly regressive (P-I-R) classification extends beyond staging and provides information on dynamic changes of liver fibrosis. However, the prognostic implication of P-I-R classification is not elucidated. Therefore, in the present research, we investigated the utility of P-I-R classification in predicting the on-treatment clinical outcomes.

Approach And Results: In an extension study on a randomized controlled trial, we originally enrolled 1000 patients with chronic hepatitis B and biopsy-proven histological significant fibrosis, and treated them for more than 7 years with entecavir-based therapy. Among the 727 patients with a second biopsy at treatment week 72, we compared P-I-R classification and Ishak score changes in 646 patients with adequate liver sections for the histological evaluation. Progressive, indeterminate, and regressive cases were observed in 70%, 17%, and 13% of patients before treatments and 20%, 14%, and 64% after 72-week treatment, respectively, which could further differentiate the histological outcomes of patients with stable Ishak scores. The 7-year cumulative incidence of HCC was 1.5% for the regressive cases, 4.3% for the indeterminate cases, and 22.8% for the progressive cases ( p <0.001). After adjusting for age, treatment regimen, platelet counts, cirrhosis, Ishak fibrosis score changes, and Laennec staging, the posttreatment progressive had a HR of 17.77 (vs. posttreatment regressive; 95% CI: 5.55-56.88) for the incidence of liver-related events (decompensation, HCC, and death/liver transplantation).

Conclusions: The P-I-R classification can be a meaningful complement to the Ishak fibrosis score not only in evaluating the histological changes but also in predicting the clinical outcomes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10789381PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/HEP.0000000000000563DOI Listing

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