The NAFLD fibrosis score

Paul Angulo(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Jason M. Hui(The University of Sydney), Giulio Marchesini(University of Bologna), Ellisabetta Bugianesi(University of Turin), Jacob George(Westmead Hospital), Geoffrey C. Farrell(Westmead Hospital), Felicity Enders(Mayo Clinic), Sushma Saksena(Freeman Hospital), Alastair D. Burt(Freeman Hospital), John P. Bida(Mayo Clinic), Keith D. Lindor(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Schuyler O. Sanderson(Mayo Clinic), Marco Lenzi(University of Bologna), Leon A. Adams(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), James G. Kench(Westmead Hospital), Terry M. Therneau(Mayo Clinic), Christopher P. Day(Freeman Hospital)
Hepatology
March 28, 2007
Cited by 3,191Open Access
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Abstract

UNLABELLED: Patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and advanced liver fibrosis are at the highest risk for progressing to end-stage liver disease. We constructed and validated a scoring system consisting of routinely measured and readily available clinical and laboratory data to separate NAFLD patients with and without advanced fibrosis. A total of 733 patients with NAFLD confirmed by liver biopsy were divided into 2 groups to construct (n = 480) and validate (n = 253) a scoring system. Routine demographic, clinical, and laboratory variables were analyzed by multivariate modeling to predict presence or absence of advanced fibrosis. Age, hyperglycemia, body mass index, platelet count, albumin, and AST/ALT ratio were independent indicators of advanced liver fibrosis. A scoring system with these 6 variables had an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.88 and 0.82 in the estimation and validation groups, respectively. By applying the low cutoff score (-1.455), advanced fibrosis could be excluded with high accuracy (negative predictive value of 93% and 88% in the estimation and validation groups, respectively). By applying the high cutoff score (0.676), the presence of advanced fibrosis could be diagnosed with high accuracy (positive predictive value of 90% and 82% in the estimation and validation groups, respectively). By applying this model, a liver biopsy would have been avoided in 549 (75%) of the 733 patients, with correct prediction in 496 (90%). CONCLUSION: a simple scoring system accurately separates patients with NAFLD with and without advanced fibrosis, rendering liver biopsy for identification of advanced fibrosis unnecessary in a substantial proportion of patients.


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