Number of portal tract macrophages correlates with the modified hepatic activity index in chronic hepatitis C infection
Abstract The Ishak modified hepatic activity index (mHAI) is widely used to score disease activity in chronic hepatitis C infection. However, the scoring of the mHAI components is subjective and prone to interobserver variation. Liver injury results in increased numbers of portal tract macrophages,...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Annals of diagnostic pathology 2011-04, Vol.15 (2), p.103-107 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Abstract The Ishak modified hepatic activity index (mHAI) is widely used to score disease activity in chronic hepatitis C infection. However, the scoring of the mHAI components is subjective and prone to interobserver variation. Liver injury results in increased numbers of portal tract macrophages, which are easily identified via periodic acid–Schiff with diastase digestion stain. Evaluation of 30 liver biopsies from patients with chronic hepatitis C revealed increasing numbers of portal tract macrophages as scores of liver inflammation increased. Specifically, the number of PASD-positive portal tract macrophages per centimeter of biopsy length correlated with the level of portal inflammation and total mHAI score, and these correlations were statistically significant ( P = .039 and .029, respectively). Although the portal macrophage count appeared to correlate with the interface activity and lobular necroinflammatory score, this did not meet statistical significance ( P = .073 and .079, respectively). Interobserver agreement by κ analysis was greater for the portal macrophage count than for any individual component of the mHAI score. In summary, the number of periportal ceroid-laden macrophages correlates with liver inflammation as measured using the mHAI, with better interobserver agreement. This technique may serve as a useful adjunct to the mHAI in the assessment of liver injury in hepatitis C. |
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ISSN: | 1092-9134 1532-8198 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.anndiagpath.2010.11.003 |