How well do SRU elastography recommendations define cirrhosis?

Monday, November 27 | 3:40 p.m.-3:50 p.m. | SSE08-05 | Room E352
How accurate are guidelines from the Society of Radiologists in Ultrasound (SRU) for evaluating advanced fibrosis in patients with cirrhosis? Researchers from the University of Pittsburgh will address this question in a session on Monday afternoon.

In their study, Dr. Amol Shah and colleagues assessed the shear-wave velocities (SWVs) of patients with known hepatic cirrhosis, comparing each patient's value with the cutoff measurement for advanced fibrosis established by recent SRU guidelines (> 2.2 m/sec).

The researchers included 82 patients with known cirrhosis from two academic centers. All patients underwent acoustic radiation force impulse shear-wave elastography. For each exam, the team noted 10 shear-wave velocity measurements; the median was considered the final velocity.

The measurements ranged from 1.17 m/sec to 2.66 m/sec, with the majority of patients (89%) showing a shear-wave velocity less than the SRU cutoff; in fact, only nine patients (11%) met the SWV measure guidelines.

The guidelines need to be reconsidered, the researchers noted.

"The current SRU cutoff of SWV > 2.2 m/sec [misses] the majority of patients with advanced fibrosis (including cirrhosis) and, thus, revision of these guidelines may be necessary in the near future," they concluded.

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