Assessment of Liver Fibrosis Stage and Cirrhosis Regression After Long-Term Follow-Up Following Sustained Virological Response
Lidia Canillas, Dolores Naranjo, Teresa Broquetas, Juan Sánchez, Anna Pocurull, Esther Garrido, Rosa Fernández, Xavier Forns, José A. Carrión

TL;DR
This study shows that most patients with advanced liver disease do not experience significant improvement in liver fibrosis after curing hepatitis C, though some with mild cirrhosis may see limited regression.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into fibrosis regression and cirrhosis stability after long-term follow-up post-HCV cure using paired biopsies and liver stiffness measurements.
Findings
Advanced fibrosis persists in most patients after HCV eradication.
Regression is possible in mild cirrhosis (F4A) but rare in more severe cases (F4B–F4C).
VCTE-LSM ≤ 8.6 kPa at 1 year post-EOT accurately identifies patients without advanced fibrosis.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Previous studies have demonstrated that the cessation of liver damage after HCV cure can improve liver function, histological necroinflammation, and portal hypertension. However, scarce data about fibrosis stage or cirrhosis regression have been reported during follow-up. Methods: A prospective study evaluating hepatic biopsies and liver stiffness measurement by vibration-controlled transient elastography (VCTE-LSM) after the end of treatment (EOT) in patients with compensated advanced chronic liver disease (cACLD). Fibrosis was evaluated according to two semi-quantitative grading systems (METAVIR and Laennec) at 6 years after EOT (LB6) and compared with biopsies at 3 years (LB3). Results: Fifty-four patients with LB6 (34 with paired LB3–LB6) were included. Median (IQR) age was 53.9 (48.5–59.3), 38 (70.4%) were men, and 13 (24.1%) were HIV-coinfected. The VCTE-LSM…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLiver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment · Hepatitis C virus research · Liver Disease and Transplantation
