Abstract

Purpose

We aimed to investigate whether prediction of liver fibrosis using two-dimensional shear wave elastography (2D-SWE) and vascular tree grading using superb microvascular imaging (SMI) are useful for postoperative follow-up in patients with biliary atresia (BA).

Methods

We retrospectively collected data from medical records of 134 patients who underwent ultrasound examination with 2D-SWE or SMI, including 13 postoperative patients with BA and 121 non-BA patients. We investigated the distribution of liver stiffness values with SWE and vascular tree grading with SMI and evaluated correlations between these findings and biochemical indices of liver fibrosis in postoperative BA patients.

Results

The SWE values of the BA group were not significantly different from that of any other disease groups in non-BA patients. In postoperative BA patients, SWE values correlated significantly with aspartate aminotransferase to platelet ratio index (Spearman rank correlation coefficient [rs]=0.6380, p=0.0256) and with the Fib-4 index (rs=0.6526, p=0.0214). SMI vascular tree grading of the BA group was significantly higher than that of the choledochal cyst group (p=0.0008) and other hepatobiliary disorder group (p=0.0030). In postoperative BA patients, SMI vascular tree grading was not positively correlated with any biochemical marker of fibrosis.

Conclusion

2D-SWE appears to be useful for follow-up in postoperative BA patients.

Details

Title
Assessment of the utility of two-dimensional shear wave elastography and superb microvascular imaging in postoperative patients with biliary atresia
Author
Oita, Satoru; Toma, Miki; Hirono, Koji; Masuko, Takayuki; Shimizu, Toru; Shimizu, Sakika; Miyajima, Kojiro; Asai, Nobuyoshi; Yanai, Toshihiro
Publication year
2024
Publication date
Sep 8, 2024
Publisher
Research Square
Source type
Working Paper
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
3103747465
Copyright
© 2024. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.