Medicine
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This repository contains the published and unpublished research of the Faculty of Medicine by the staff members of the faculty
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Item Mistakes in utilising histopathology for the management of liver disease(Taylor & Francis, 2024) Niriella, M.A.; Kanagarajah, D.; Hewavisenthi, J.D.S.; De Silva, H.J.INTRODUCTION Liver biopsy has become selective due to its invasiveness, potential adverse effects, patient acceptance and cost. Furthermore, the emergence of noninvasive tests (NITs) has challenged the necessity of liver biopsies in specific clinical situations. However, liver biopsy continues to play a crucial role in disease diagnosis, prognosis, and evaluating treatment compliance and response in selected patients.AREAS COVERED In this narrative review, we discuss the errors and the shortcomings that can occur at various stages, from the initial patient selection for a liver biopsy to the final reporting phase, and strategies to address them. Clinicians and pathologists must take all necessary precautions to mitigate potential shortcomings that could compromise the value of liver biopsies.EXPERT OPINION The increasing sophistication of NITs offers a safer, more convenient, and potentially more cost-effective approach to diagnosing chronic liver disease, especially for assessing the degree of liver fibrosis. As NITs continue to evolve, liver biopsy will likely transition to a more targeted role, ensuring optimal patient care in the ever-changing field of hepatology. However, liver biopsy will continue to have a pivotal role in assessing acute liver disease where the diagnostic yield of the liver biopsy still outweighs that of NITs.Item Using FIB-4 score as a screening tool in the assessment of significant liver fibrosis (F2) in patients with transfusion-dependent beta thalassaemia: a cross-sectional study(BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2022) Padeniya, P.; Ediriweera, D.S.; de Silva, A.P.; Niriella, M.A.; Premawardhena, A.Objective: To evaluate the performance of the fibrosis-4 (FIB-4) score as a screening tool to detect significant liver fibrosis (F2) compared with transient elastography (TE), among chronic transfusion-dependent beta-thalassaemia (TDT) patients in a resource-poor setting. Design: A cross-sectional study. Setting: Adolescent and Adult Thalassaemia Care Centre (University Medical Unit), Kiribathgoda, Sri Lanka. Participants: 45 TDT patients who had undergone more than 100 blood transfusions with elevated serum ferritin >2000 ng/mL were selected for the study. Patients who were serologically positive for hepatitis C antibodies were excluded. Outcome measures: TE and FIB-4 scores were estimated at the time of recruitment in all participants. Predefined cut-off values for F2, extracted from previous TE and FIB-4 scores studies, were compared. A new cut-off value for the FIB-4 score was estimated using receiver operating characteristics curve analysis to improve the sensitivity for F2 prediction. Results: Of the selected 45 TDT patients, 22 (49%) were males. FIB-4 score showed a significant linear correlation with TE (r=0.52;p<0.0003). The FIB-4 score was improbable to lead to a false classification of TDT patients to have F2 when the FIB-4 cut-off value was 1.3. On the other hand, it had a very low diagnostic yield in missing almost all (except one) of those who had F2. Using a much-lowered cut-off point of 0.32 for FIB-4, we improved the pick-up rate of F2 to 72%. Conclusions: Regardless of the cut-off point, the FIB-4 score cannot be used as a good screening tool to pick up F2 in patients with TDT, irrespective of their splenectomy status. On the contrary, at a 1.3 cut-off value, though FIB-4 is a very poor detector for F2 fibrosis, it will not erroneously diagnose F2 fibrosis in those who do not have it.