The evaluation of hepatic fibrosis on histological sections is of great interest for the staging and follow-up of chronic liver disease. Because no reliable scoring system is yet available, we have designed a semiquantitative scoring system in which the four main sites of fibrotic deposit--centrilobular vein, portal tract and perisinusoidal space, together with width and number of septa when present--are analyzed. These different items have been previously settled from comparison with morphometric measurements to evaluate surface density of total collagen performed on the same liver needle biopsy specimens stained with picro-sirius. The score has been tested on samples from 200 consecutive patients with various liver diseases and compared with the surface density of total collagen and Knodell scoring system. For observer variation study, the features by three independent pathologists were coded on 20 cases. There was a good interobserver (Kendall's tau-b = 0.75) and intraobserver (tau-B = 0.73) reproducibility. Each component of the fibrosis scoring system and total collagen surface density were significantly linearly related (one-way polynomial analysis, p < 10(-4); the correlation between semiquantitative scoring system and surface density of total collagen was 0.73 (p < 10(-5). Our semiquantitative scoring system, simple and reproducible, describes both liver architecture and fibrotic deposit. It is better related to morphometric measurement of fibrosis than each of its constituents or than the fibrosis item of the Knodell scoring system. It represents a reliable and convenient method for fibrosis evaluation, which is mandatory for clinical use.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of interferon-alpha on liver fibrosis with an established quantitative histochemical method for determining collagen as a marker. 59 patients (31 men, 28 women; 47 +/- 14 yr) with chronic non-A, non-B hepatitis (92% with hepatitis C virus antibody) received subcutaneous injections of 3 or 1 MU recombinant interferon-alpha 2b or placebo thrice weekly for 24 wk. Needle-biopsy sections taken before and after interferon treatment were examined for histological evaluation and collagen quantitation. Values were compared with results obtained by means of morphometrical analysis of liver collagen and Knodell scoring histological index. The index of periportal and/or bridging necrosis was the only component of Knodell's histological score significantly decreased (p < 0.05) in patients treated with 3 MU interferon compared with placebo-treated controls. The fibrosis score was not significantly changed. In contrast, liver total collagen variations measured colorimetrically and morphometrically were significantly decreased in patients treated with 3 MU and 1 MU compared with the increase observed in the placebo-treated controls (p < 0.05). From these results, we conclude that a 6-mo course of 3 MU or 1 MU interferon-alpha 2b causes slight but nonetheless significant regression of liver fibrosis as assessed on the basis of quantitative estimation of liver collagen, irrespective of other response criteria, whereas progression of liver fibrosis can be observed in the absence of treatment.
Ribavirin is a purine nucleoside that inhibits the replication of a variety of RNA viruses and was shown to have a transient efficacy in chronic hepatitis C during short-term therapy. We have analysed retrospectively its efficacy in 95 patients with liver biopsy-proven chronic hepatitis C. Patients received oral ribavirin (600-1200 mg daily) for a mean duration of 11 months. Alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels returned to normal values in 38 patients (40%) and decreased by more than 50% in 20 other patients (21%). HCV RNA clearance from serum was observed in seven patients (8%). The biochemical response rate was higher in patients with chronic hepatitis (54%) than in those with cirrhosis (24%) (P = 0.003). Clearance of HCV RNA was observed in 10% of the patients with chronic hepatitis vs 4% of the patients with cirrhosis. In non-responders to interferon (IFN) therapy, ALT levels returned to normal values in 11 (26%) and HCV RNA became negative in one (2%), as compared to 48% and 3%, respectively, in those contraindicated for IFN. In 17 patients in whom paired liver biopsy specimens were available, the histology activity index (HAI) improved in 12. Therapy was generally well tolerated although 11 patients had to stop therapy because of side-effects, which were more common in cirrhotic patients. In conclusion, our results suggest that long-term administration of ribavirin is well tolerated and may be beneficial in controlling the progression of chronic hepatitis C. This may represent an alternative therapy in patients who have contraindications for interferon therapy or as a palliative approach in non-responders to IFN.
In chronic hepatitis C, previous data have shown that short-term treatment with interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) can reduce collagen deposition in the liver independently of the viral response. The aim of this work was to determine, in non-responder patients, the long-term effect of IFN-alpha on liver fibrosis according to the total administered dose and the fibrotic stage. Fibrosis was investigated on liver biopsies from 24 non-responder patients with chronic hepatitis C retreated with successive courses of IFN-alpha. The degree of liver fibrosis was assessed on three successive biopsies, performed before IFN-alpha treatment and 1 and 5 years later, in 13 and 11 patients, respectively, treated for less (mean: 7.5 months, 313 MU) and more (mean: 21.8 months, 791 MU) than 1 year. For each biopsy, fibrosis was assessed using a histological semiquantitative fibrosis scoring system and by morphometry after picrosirius red staining. Regardless of the dose and duration of IFN-alpha therapy, a slight decrease of fibrosis was observed in patients 5 years after starting treatment. In cirrhotic patients, a short treatment induced an improvement followed by a relapse of fibrosis in 57%, and only 43% of patients showed constant collagen regression over the 5 years of follow-up. On the contrary, after prolonged therapy, a progressive and significant decrease occurred throughout the follow-up period in all patients (P = 0.045). Long-term treatment with IFN-alpha is therefore associated with regression of liver fibrosis, particularly in cirrhotic patients. These promising results need to be confirmed in a larger series of patients.
To compare three quantitative assays measuring viral load in patients with chronic hepatitis C and to determine their value in predicting response to interferon (IFN) therapy, we analysed serum from 896 patients from eight European Centres using QUANTIPLEXtrade mark bDNA, MONITOR AMPLICORtrade mark and SUPERQUANTtrade mark assays. Analyses were performed on the same sample. Viral genotype was assessed using INNO-LiPA HCV II kits. Intercentre variations were observed that were related to the handling of specimens not processed and stored within 6 h of blood sampling. Among sera with optimal handling, a stronger correlation was observed between bDNA and SUPERQUANT (0.806) than between bDNA and MONITOR (0.677) and between MONITOR and SUPERQUANT (0.632). These discrepancies were greatest with genotype 2 (bDNA/SUPERQUANT= 0.772; bDNA/MONITOR=0. 456; SUPERQUANT/MONITOR= 0.299). This correlation was influenced by viraemia level and was better at lower viral loads. The proportion of sera with undetectable viral load was 15% with bDNA, 9.7% with MONITOR and 7.7% with SUPERQUANT. For the three measurements, the best cut-offs of sustained response to IFN treatment were located at their detection threshold. Among patients with viral load below the detection level, a sustained response was observed in 35% tested with bDNA, 38% with MONITOR and 80% with SUPERQUANT. Hence a stronger correlation was observed between bDNA and SUPERQUANT than between either of these assays and MONITOR. SUPERQUANT was the most sensitive assay and this greater sensitivity was associated with a better predictive value of treatment response.
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