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Autotaxin accurate, noninvasive biomarker for fibrosis in chronic HBV
Joshita S, et al. Heptaol Res. 2017;doi:10.1111/hepr.12997.
November 30, 2017
Serum autotaxin was an accurate, noninvasive biomarker for liver fibrosis among patients with chronic hepatitis B in a recently published study.
“Serum autotaxin (ATX) has recently been reported as a novel marker candidate to assess liver fibrosis. ATX was originally isolated from the conditioned medium of A2058 human melanoma cells as a potent cell motility-stimulating factor,” Satoru Joshita, MD, from the division of gastroenterology and hepatology at Shinshu University of Medicine, Japan, and colleagues wrote. “As the clinical features of ATX in patients with hepatitis B remain unknown, this study evaluated the performance of serum ATX in predicting histological fibrosis in chronic HBV infection.”
The researchers enrolled 101 patients with chronic HBV who were nucleos(t)ide analogue treatment-naive and 160 age- and sex-matched controls. Patients had undergone liver biopsy and did not have concomitant hepatitis C, HIV or other liver disease, and had no history of organ transplantation.
Based on histology, patients included in the study had fibrosis stage 0 (n = 4), stage 1 (n = 33), stage 2 (n = 25), stage 3 (n = 22) or stage 4 (n = 17).
To evaluate the association between ATX and liver fibrosis stage, the researchers followed the patients for a median of 154 weeks. Additionally, the researchers enrolled 15 treatment-naive patients with chronic HBC for a longitudinal analysis of ATX during nucleos(t)ide analogue therapy.
Compared with controls, patients with HBV had significantly higher levels of ATX (P < .0001). Women had significantly higher levels of ATX compared with both men in the control cohort (P = .038) and men in the HBV cohort (P < .0001).
ATX levels correlated significantly with fibrosis stage among all patients (r = 0.46; P < .0001) and among male (r = 0.55; P < .0001) and female (r = 0.52; P < .0006) groupings. While ATX levels also correlated significantly with histological activity grade in all patients (r = 0.27; P < .007) and men (r = 0.43; P < .001), the association was not significant in women.
ATX vs. other noninvasive markers
Regarding other noninvasive biomarkers, ATX correlated significantly among all patients with Wisteria floribunda agglutinin-positive Mac-2 binding protein (r = 0.51; P < .001), hyaluronic acid (r = 0.58; P < .001), type IV collagen 7S (r = 0.47; P < .001), aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio index (r = 0.31; P = .002; APRI) and Fibrosis-4 index (r = 0.54; P < .001).
ATX remained significantly correlated with the other noninvasive fibrosis markers in both men and women except for type IV collagen 7S in women.
ATX demonstrated a high diagnostic ability among patients with fibrosis stage 2 or higher (AUROC = 0.761), those with stage 3 or higher (AUROC = 0.691) and those with fibrosis stage 4 (AUROC = 0.758), which remained high for both men and women.
Among the 15 treatment-naive patients with chronic HBV in the longitudinal study, treatment with nucleos(t)ide analogue therapy for 12 months significantly decreased alanine aminotransferase levels (P < .001), HBV-DNA (P < .001), hepatitis B core-related antigen (P < .01) and APRI (P < .01), but the researchers observed no significant differences in ATX levels in all patients, men or women.
“An earlier report showed that ATX was a prognostic factor for overall survival in patients with cirrhosis, suggesting that it played an important role in disease progression involving such complications as [hepatocellular carcinoma] and hepatic failure,” the researchers concluded. “However, no significant association was detected between serum ATX and the incidence of HCC development in our cohort ... and thus requires additional study.” – by Talitha Bennett
Disclosure: Healio.com/Hepatology was unable to determine relevant financial disclosures of the authors at the time of publication.
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