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发表于 2006-4-2 12:59:40
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[转帖]Liver Biopsy Sampling in Chronic Viral Hepatitis
Would the Sample Size Affect the Histological Assessment of Chronic
Hepatitis in Terms of Grade and Stage?
Before evidence-based medicine and before grading and staging, Sherlock
postulated that "a satisfactory biopsy is 1-4 cm long and weighs 10-50
mg."[3] This was a general principle applicable to all kinds of liver
disease, but Sherlock noted that "in macronodular cirrhosis it is possible
to aspirate a large nodule and find normal architecture" and that "there is
sampling variability in the diagnosis of cirrhosis and chronic active
hepatitis."[3] Authoritative literature[13] suggests that a biopsy 1.5 cm
long suffices for the histological assessment of chronic hepatitis and that
pathologists are "satisfied" with samples containing four to six portal
tracts (we might add that it is a matter of satisfying not the pathologists';
needs but the patients'; needs), and these standards have been extensively
adopted in clinical studies.
The Historical Perspective
Two studies performed by the same group investigated the relationship
between sample variability and sample size.
The first evaluated 100 liver needle biopsies from patients with a
clinically established diagnosis of acute or chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis
of various etiology.[69] Biopsies longer than 2.5 cm were selected, but no
attention was paid to their diameter. All samples were reviewed blindly at
five different sessions, changing the length of the sample with the aid of
opaque paper tape. The study demonstrated that, although acute viral
hepatitis was reliably diagnosed, even in samples 5 mm long, only 30 and 40%
of cases of CAH and cirrhosis, respectively, were diagnosed in 5-mm samples.
Predictive positive and negative values increased significantly with
increasing sample lengths. The study concluded that "a considerable number
of biopsies less than 25 mm long are not diagnostic" for cirrhosis.
The second study[70] mainly addressed the accuracy of a diagnosis of CAH
using the same method as before, except for the needle, which was a 16-G
Menghini needle in all cases. The gold standard was, here again, the
original liver sample, which had to be no less than 25 mm long. The study
showed that the specificity of the diagnosis of CAH with or without
cirrhosis rose significantly when the length of the biopsied tissue changed
from 5 to 15 mm. Moreover, 65% of all diagnostic errors were made on
biopsies up to 10 mm long, and the error was always on the side of less
severe conditions. The study concluded that a specimen at least 15 mm long
is needed for an acceptable accuracy in the diagnosis of CAH, but larger
needle biopsy samples are warranted when cirrhosis is suspected.
Expanding on earlier data,[71] a study by Colombo et al[72] demonstrated the
superiority of the Tru-Cut (89.5% accuracy) over the Menghini needle (65.5%
accuracy) in diagnosing cirrhosis. Differences were attributed to the
greater fragmentation of liver samples obtained with the Menghini needle.
Although this was not specifically highlighted in the study, it emerged that
diagnostic accuracy depended on the number of complete portal tracts within
the biopsy samples and that 34.8% of the portal tracts in the Menghini
biopsy specimens were incomplete, compared with 19.6% in the Tru-Cut biopsy
specimens.
A weakness of the previous studies lay in the lack of intraobserver and
interobserver agreement tests, which was partially overcome by the
experience of the pathologists who performed the histological examination.
In fact, diagnostic consistency improves when the assessment is performed by
experienced pathologists specializing in liver diseases.
The Present Perspective
A more recent approach to the problem of specimen size has been to compare
"large" versus "thin" liver biopsies in the diagnosis of diffuse diseases.
The rationale behind these studies is that taking biopsies with larger
needles can cause more complications. Fine-needle biopsies are easier to
perform in outpatients under local anesthesia, and patients are more
compliant. Using a finer needle is also an advantage in clinical conditions
in which large-needle biopsy is contraindicated.
Rocken et al[73] compared thin and large biopsy samples and concluded that
the amount of tissue available correlated strongly with the type of needle,
although thin biopsies (20G) yield sufficient material to make a diagnosis
of diffuse liver disease of various etiologies. The study, however, did not
address the grading and staging of chronic hepatitis.
This was the aim of a more recently published study by the same group,[74]
in which large (17G Menghini needle) and thin (20G modified cutting Menghini
needle) biopsies from 88 patients with chronic type B or C hepatitis were
retrospectively re-evaluated for grading and staging purposes. The study
concluded that a thin biopsy is as good as a large one for the grading and
staging of chronic viral hepatitis. It is important to note, however, that
(1) the thin and large samples came from different patients; (2) there was
no clearly defined gold standard for assessing diagnostic accuracy; and (3)
because the study was retrospective, patients were not randomized to undergo
large or thin biopsy, and patients with thin biopsies were more often found
to have low platelet counts and high alanine aminotransferase levels, which
introduce a selection bias. It is also worth noting that, in the small
subgroup of patients whose clinical diagnosis of cirrhosis was taken as the
gold standard, cirrhosis was histologically diagnosed by thin samples in 44%
of cases and by large biopsies in 60%, which means that biopsy size becomes
relevant when a gold standard is established.
More recently, a study was designed to evaluate the effect of core length
and diameter on the grading and staging of chronic types B and C
hepatitis.[75] The method was similar to the one used in previous
studies[69,70] and consisted of progressively reducing the length and width
of the original samples, which were all at least 30 mm long and 1.4 mm wide.
The same pathologist reviewed all the slides throughout the various sessions
and intraobserver agreement proved to be high. This study provided evidence
that both the length and the diameter of the biopsy core affect grading and
staging and (as in the previous studies[69,70]) that examining shorter and
thinner samples leads to an underestimation of the severity of disease.
Disease activity and fibrosis were underestimated in thin biopsies (i.e., 1
mm wide) regardless of the length of the biopsy, suggesting that the main
problem lies in the lower number of complete portal tracts in the smaller
samples. Portal areas are the elective sites of damage in chronic hepatitis,
and they must be intact for disease grading and staging. The study
demonstrated that 11 to 15 complete portal tracts was the critical number
below which disease grade and stage were significantly underestimated and
that a liver biopsy 2 cm long and 1.4 mm wide guaranteed this number of
portal tracts in 94% of cases. The study also suggested that the number of
complete portal tracts should be mentioned in the histological report to
focus the clinicians'; attention on the adequacy of their samples and on the
limits of histological interpretation.
Conclusions
Clinicians having to decide whether to perform a liver biopsy will gain
little from reading this article, which is concerned exclusively with what
happens after such a decision has been made.
For this article, we tried to answer two questions: (1) Can a random sample
reflect damage to the organ as a whole? Sherlock had the answer[3]: "It is
surprising that such a small biopsy should so often be representative of
changes in the whole liver." Available data confirm that, in diffuse
processes such as acute and chronic hepatitis, a needle biopsy is
representative of the liver disease, ensuring an accurate diagnostic
classification.[56,69,70] In practice, needle liver biopsy is still
indicated to diagnose chronic viral hepatitis when clinical or serological
data, or both, produce inconsistent results or when confirmation is required
for clinical purposes (e.g., in the liver transplantation setting) or
research.
(2) Can the sample size affect the histological assessment of chronic
hepatitis in terms of grade and stage? Our earlier analyses showed that most
of the available data predated the recent grading and staging system of
chronic viral hepatitis. Almost all studies agreed that the more tissue
there is, the greater is the diagnostic accuracy—a fact that has to be
balanced against the patient';s safety (primum non nocere). The traditional
assumption that a sample 1.5 mm long or containing four to six portal
tracts, or both, is adequate is no longer true for the grading and staging
of chronic hepatitis. In fact, none of the studies using this standard
length produced consistent results[57,58,64,66-69,75] and when
different-sized samples were compared, the smaller specimens resulted in a
diagnosis of less severe[69,70,75] Samples at least 2 cm long can ensure
greater diagnostic accuracy.[63,67,69,70] Below this length, grade and stage
are significantly underestimated.[75] As for the portal tracts, their number
clearly correlates with sample size,[73-75] and there is evidence that four
to five portal tracts are not enough, not for grading and staging at least;
with fewer than 11 to 15 portal tracts, grade and stage are significantly
underestimated.[75] The study by Colloredo et al[75] introduced the concept
of a "minimum number of complete portal tracts." The lower number of
complete portal tracts may explain the lower diagnostic accuracy obtained
with smaller samples.[68,71,73]
Although technological advances are making medical practice progressively
less bloody and painful (e.g., with the wider diffusion of mini-invasive
surgery and refinement of endoscopic techniques), many medical procedures in
daily practice nevertheless remain invasive. Invasiveness is a feature of
both therapeutic and diagnostic procedures, including morphological
analyses, and liver biopsies are no exception. Their potential harmfulness
is often stressed in the current lively debate on whether it is appropriate
to take liver biopsies in chronic viral hepatitis. "First, do no harm."[76]
No one would disagree with this ethic, but this is not necessarily the same
as saying "Do no biopsy." Harm can also be done by failing to perform a
biopsy[77] or by basing action on the strength of an inadequate sample.
In the current scenario of chronic viral hepatitis, the main goal of liver
biopsy is to grade and stage the liver damage for prognosis and treatment.
An adequate (although probably still imperfect) sample, pending the
availability of reliable noninvasive methods, needs to be at least 2 cm long
and to contain no fewer than 11 complete portal tracts.
Procedures for obtaining such an "adequate" biopsy sample are currently
available and in routine use at most liver units.
While this article was in press, two additional articles have been published
dealing with the same topic. In the first one, Bedossa et al, (Hepatology
2003; 38:1446-57) addressed the problem of sampling variability by using a
virtual, computer assisted, analysis. In the second, Brunetti et al (J
Hepatol 2004; 40:501-6) evaluated the diagnostic yield of a series of
paired, fine and coarse liver blopsies obtained in 149 consecutive patients
with chronic hepatitis C. Both these studies further support our conclusions
on the characteristics of liver sample to be considered adequate for
assessing grading and staging in chronic hepatitis.
CME Information
The print version of this article was originally certified for CME credit.
For accreditation details, contact the publisher. Seminars in Liver Disease,
Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc., 333 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY 10001.
Reprint Address
Maria Guido, M.D., Istituto di Anatomia Patologica, Via Gabelli, 61, 35100
Padova, Italy. E-mail: mguido@unipd.it.
Abbreviation Notes
CAH, chronic active hepatitis; CT, computed tomography; HBV, hepatitis B
virus; HCV, hepatitis C virus; US, ultrasound
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