Usefulness of Spleen Index and Alkaline Phosphatase Level for Predicting Post‐Liver Biopsy Bleeding
Hirohito Takeuchi, Katsutoshi Sugimoto, Tatsuya Kakegawa, Hiroshi Takahashi, Takuya Wada, Masakazu Abe, Yu Yoshimasu, Kazuharu Harada, Masataka Taguri, Takao Itoi

TL;DR
This study identifies spleen index and alkaline phosphatase levels as predictors of bleeding risk after liver biopsy, helping doctors prepare for potential complications.
Contribution
The study introduces spleen index and ALP level as novel predictors for post-liver biopsy bleeding risk.
Findings
A higher spleen index (AUC: 0.74) was significantly associated with increased bleeding risk after liver biopsy.
Elevated alkaline phosphatase (ALP) levels (AUC: 0.71) also predicted increased bleeding risk.
Other factors like age, PT-INR, needle size, and Child–Pugh score were also linked to bleeding complications.
Abstract
The significance of liver biopsy is increasing with an increase in chronic liver disease and gene panel testing. Although non‐invasive methods such as elastography and biomarkers assess liver fibrosis, biopsy remains the definitive diagnostic gold standard. We evaluated the predictors of bleeding complications in liver biopsies. A total of 697 patients were enrolled in this study between May 2017 and October 2022. We examined bleeding complications and procedures following liver biopsy and the liver biopsy needle size, blood test results, and spleen index to determine factors related to bleeding complications. Bleeding complications occurred in 23 patients (3.3%), including 20 cases at the liver puncture site, two instances of biliary bleeding, and one intercostal artery injury. The treatments varied and included hepatic arterial embolization (2 patients, 0.3%), blood transfusion…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLiver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment · Liver Disease and Transplantation · Pancreatitis Pathology and Treatment
