Systematic review and individual-patient-data meta-analysis of non-invasive fibrosis markers for chronic hepatitis B in Africa.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
January 3, 2023
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Johannessen, Asgeir | |
Stockdale, Alexander J | |
Henrion, Marc Y R | |
Okeke, Edith | |
Seydi, Moussa | |
Sonderup, Mark | |
Spearman, C Wendy | |
Vinikoor, Michael | |
Sinkala, Edford | |
Desalegn, Hailemichael | |
Fall, Fatou | |
Riches, Nicholas | |
Davwar, Pantong | |
Duguru, Mary | |
Maponga, Tongai | |
Taljaard, Jantjie | |
Matthews, Philippa C | |
Andersson, Monique | |
Mboup, Souleyman | |
Sombie, Roger | |
Shimakawa, Yusuke | |
Lemoine, Maud |
Series
Nature communications
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2041-1723
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
36596805
Description
In sub-Saharan Africa, simple biomarkers of liver fibrosis are needed to scale-up hepatitis B treatment. We conducted an individual participant data meta-analysis of 3,548 chronic hepatitis B patients living in eight sub-Saharan African countries to assess the World Health Organization-recommended aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio index and two other fibrosis biomarkers using a Bayesian bivariate model. Transient elastography was used as a reference test with liver stiffness measurement thresholds at 7.9 and 12.2kPa indicating significant fibrosis and cirrhosis, respectively. At the World Health Organization-recommended cirrhosis threshold (>2.0), aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio index had sensitivity (95% credible interval) of only 16.5% (12.5-20.5). We identified an optimised aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio index rule-in threshold (>0.65) for liver stiffness measurement >12.2kPa with sensitivity and specificity of 56.2% (50.5-62.2) and 90.0% (89.0-91.0), and an optimised rule-out threshold (<0.36) with sensitivity and specificity of 80.6% (76.1-85.1) and 64.3% (62.8-65.8). Here we show that the World Health Organization-recommended aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio index threshold is inappropriately high in sub-Saharan Africa; improved rule-in and rule-out thresholds can optimise treatment recommendations in this setting.
File(s)
| File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| s41467-022-35729-w.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 1.93 MB | Attribution (CC BY 4.0) | published |