Discordance between vibration controlled-transient elastography and ultrasound in cirrhosis assessment: prognostic implications for liver-related events in patients with chronic hepatitis B.
Accurate cirrhosis assessment is crucial to guide treatment and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) surveillance in chronic liver disease (CLD).
- 표본수 (n) 418
- p-value p = 0.01
- p-value p < 0.001
APA
Uman N, Chamroonkul N, et al. (2026). Discordance between vibration controlled-transient elastography and ultrasound in cirrhosis assessment: prognostic implications for liver-related events in patients with chronic hepatitis B.. Scientific reports. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-026-45880-9
MLA
Uman N, et al.. "Discordance between vibration controlled-transient elastography and ultrasound in cirrhosis assessment: prognostic implications for liver-related events in patients with chronic hepatitis B.." Scientific reports, 2026.
PMID
41927760
Abstract
Accurate cirrhosis assessment is crucial to guide treatment and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) surveillance in chronic liver disease (CLD). Ultrasonography (USG) and Vibration-Controlled Transient Elastography (VCTE) are widely used non-invasive tools, but discordance results are frequently observed. We evaluated the risk of liver-related events (LREs) based on concordant and discordant USG and VCTE diagnoses of cirrhosis. This retrospective study included 532 chronic hepatitis B patients who underwent VCTE between 2014 and 2021. Key exclusion criteria were unreliable VCTE results and prior hepatic decompensation. Cirrhosis was defined as LSM ≥ 10 kPa by VCTE and by radiologists' reports for USG. LREs were defined as the development of HCC or cirrhosis complications. We found that discordant results occurred in 13% of patients. Overall, 17 LREs (3.2%) were observed during a 4.4-year of median follow-up period. Patients were stratified into four groups: concordant non-cirrhosis (Group 1, n = 418; 3 LREs [0.7%]); cirrhosis by USG only (Group 2, n = 21; 0 LREs); cirrhosis by VCTE only (Group 3, n = 50; 3 LREs [6.0%]); and concordant cirrhosis (Group 4, n = 43; 11 LREs [25.6%]).The 5-year LRE-free survivals were 99.3%, 100%, 94%, and 72.1% in groups 1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively. Multivariable Cox regression analysis showed significantly increased risk for LREs only in Group 3 (aHR 8.54, p = 0.01) and Group 4 (aHR 34.9, p < 0.001). In summary, discordant in cirrhosis diagnosis is a common clinical challenge. While concordant cirrhosis carries the highest LRE risk, VCTE serves a crucial complementary role in discordant cases by identifying high-risk patients potentially overlooked by USG alone.