Diagnostics (Oct 2024)

Comparing Different Methods for the Diagnosis of Liver Steatosis: What Are the Best Diagnostic Tools?

  • Sophie Chopinet,
  • Olivier Lopez,
  • Sophie Brustlein,
  • Antoine Uzel,
  • Anais Moyon,
  • Isabelle Varlet,
  • Laure Balasse,
  • Frank Kober,
  • Mickaël Bobot,
  • Monique Bernard,
  • Aurélie Haffner,
  • Michaël Sdika,
  • Bruno Montcel,
  • Benjamin Guillet,
  • Vincent Vidal,
  • Emilie Grégoire,
  • Jean Hardwigsen,
  • Pauline Brige

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics14202292
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 20
p. 2292

Abstract

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Background: Due to the ongoing organ shortage, marginal grafts with steatosis are more frequently used in liver transplantation, leading to higher occurrences of graft dysfunction. A histological analysis is the gold standard for the quantification of liver steatosis (LS), but has its drawbacks: it is an invasive method that varies from one pathologist to another and is not available in every hospital at the time of organ procurement. This study aimed to compare non-invasive diagnostic tools to a histological analysis for the quantification of liver steatosis. Methods: Male C57BL6J mice were fed with a methioninecholine-deficient (MCD) diet for 14 days or 28 days to induce LS, and were compared to a control group of animals fed with a normal diet. The following non-invasive techniques were performed and compared to the histological quantification of liver steatosis: magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS), CARS microscopy, 99mTc MIBI SPECT imaging, and a new near-infrared spectrometer (NIR-SG1). Results: After 28 days on the MCD diet, an evaluation of LS showed ≥30% macrovesicular steatosis. High correlations were found between the NIR-SG1 and the blinded pathologist analysis (R2 = 0.945) (p = 0.001), and between the CARS microscopy (R2 = 0.801 (p 2 = 0.898 (p p = 0.021 and p p p 99mTc MIBI SPECT was 0.640 (p = 0.013), and this was a less discriminating technique for LS quantification. Conclusions: The best-performing non-invasive methods for LS quantification are MRS, CARS microscopy, and the NIR-SG1. The NIR-SG1 is particularly appropriate for clinical practice and needs to be validated by clinical studies on liver grafts.

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