Sampling error and intraobserver variation in liver biopsy in patients with chronic HCV infection
Jackson Memorial Hospital · University of Miami · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Needle liver biopsy has been shown to have a high rate of sampling error in patients with diffuse parenchymal liver diseases. In these cases, the sample of liver tissue does not reflect the true degree of inflammation, fibrosis, or cirrhosis, despite an adequate sample size. The aim of this study was to determine the rate and extent of sampling error in patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infection, and to assess the intraobserver variation with the commonly used scoring system proposed by Scheuer and modified by Batts and Ludwig.
A total of 124 patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infection underwent simultaneous laparoscopy-guided biopsies of the right and left hepatic lobes. Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded sections were stained with hematoxylin and eosin and with trichrome. The slides were blindly coded and randomly divided among two hepatopathologists. Inflammation and fibrosis were scored according to the standard grading (inflammation) and staging (fibrosis) method based on the modified Scheuer system. Following the interpretation, the slides were uncoded to compare the results of the right and left lobes. Fifty of the samples were blindly resubmitted to each of the pathologists to determine the intraobserver variation.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 19.36
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 37
Authors
9Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Cirrhosis
- Fibrosis
- Liver biopsy
- Biopsy
- Sampling (signal processing)
- Masson's trichrome stain
- Grading (engineering)
- Good health and well-being