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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2017 Nov 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Hepatol. 2016 Jun 14;65(5):1006–1016. doi: 10.1016/j.jhep.2016.06.005

MRI and MRE for non-invasive quantitative assessment of hepatic steatosis and fibrosis in NAFLD and NASH: Clinical trials to clinical practice

Parambir S Dulai 1, Claude B Sirlin 2, Rohit Loomba 1,3
PMCID: PMC5124376  NIHMSID: NIHMS795526  PMID: 27312947

Abstract

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) represents one of the most common causes of chronic liver disease, and its prevalence is rising worldwide. The occurrence of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is associated with a substantial increase in disease related morbidity and mortality. Accordingly, there has been a surge of innovation surrounding drug development in an effort to off-set the natural progression and long-term risks of this disease. Disease assessment within clinical trials and clinical practice for NAFLD is currently done with liver biopsies. Liver biopsy-based assessments, however, remain imprecise and are not without cost or risk. This carries significant implications for the feasibility and costs of bringing therapeutic interventions to market. A need therefore arises for reliable and highly accurate surrogate end-points that can be used in phase 2 and 3 clinical trials to reduce trial size requirements and costs, while improving feasibility and ease of implementation in clinical practice. Significant advances have now been made in magnetic resonance technology, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and elastrography (MRE) have been demonstrated to be highly accurate diagnostic tools for the detection of hepatic steatosis and fibrosis. In this review article, we will summarize the currently available evidence regarding the use of MRI and MRE among NAFLD patients, and the evolving role these surrogate biomarkers will play in the rapidly advancing arena of clinical trials in NASH and hepatic fibrosis. Furthermore, we will highlight how these tools can be readily applied to routine clinical practice, where the growing burden of NAFLD will need to be met with enhanced monitoring algorithms.

Keywords: magnetic resonance imaging, magnetic resonance elastography, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis

Introduction

Affecting nearly 100 million Americans, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is one of the most common causes of chronic liver disease in the United States, and its rates are rising internationally alongside the growing epidemics of diabetes, obesity, and metabolic syndrome.13 NAFLD is commonly classified into two phenotypes, nonalcoholic fatty liver (NAFL) and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), and the development of NASH is associated with an increased risk for morbidity and mortality through hepatic (fibrosis, cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma) and non-hepatic (cardiovascular disease and cancer) complications. 411 Recognizing the growing burden of NAFLD worldwide, the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) and other international professional societies are working with the regulatory agencies to better define therapeutic targets and treatment end-points in NASH.12 This has led to a substantial rise in the number of studies being conducted worldwide,5 and although no therapeutic interventions are currently approved for use in NASH, it is anticipated that the clinical trial landscape of NASH and hepatic fibrosis will experience a surge of innovation and exponential growth over the coming years.

Currently, therapeutic trials in NASH require liver biopsy assessment to document treatment response. The use of liver biopsies, however, is not without cost or risk (bleeding, perforation, death) and it is met with hesitation from both patients and providers alike. Additionally, its scoring is associated with a significant inter- and intra-observer variability.1316 Furthermore, although fat accumulation within the liver tends to be diffuse, the distribution is often non-uniform which results in inaccurate assessments of disease progression or regression due to spatial variability in sampling.1722 These limitations carry significant implications for clinical trials as the diagnostic accuracy, reliability, and responsiveness of treatment end-points impact trial size requirements, feasibility, and costs. Furthermore, translating these findings to routine practice is difficult given the inability to perform routine frequent liver biopsies in clinical practice. Thus, a need exists for reliable and highly accurate surrogate end-points that can be used in place of liver biopsies. This will be of substantial importance in early-phase clinical trials, and will help to ensure clinical trial findings are readily translatable and measurable in routine practice.

Non-invasive biomarkers have been identified for NAFLD, but their variable diagnostic accuracy, limitations in certain sub-populations, and lack of validation make it difficult to uniformly apply these as surrogate end-points in clinical trials or clinical practice.14, 23, 24 Significant advances have now been made in magnetic resonance technology, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and elastrography (MRE) have been demonstrated to be highly accurate diagnostic tools for non-invasive quantitative assessment of hepatic steatosis and fibrosis.2530 Thus, they may be suitable alternatives to liver biopsy for diagnosing NALFD, for identifying at risk populations (NASH and those with hepatic fibrosis), and for assessing response to therapeutic interventions.

In this review article, we will summarize the currently available evidence regarding the use of MRI and MRE among NAFLD patients, the advantages these imaging techniques have over other modalities, and how they may be used for the assessment of hepatic steatosis and fibrosis in clinical trials and clinical practice. The development and validation of these magnetic resonance-based technologies will have considerable implications on the evolving clinical trial environment of NALFD, and on clinical practice where the growing burden of NAFLD in the community will need to eventually be met with non-invasive screening and monitoring protocols.

Criteria for the use of biomarkers as surrogates and clinical end-points

A biomarker is a characteristic that is objectively measured and evaluated as an indication of normal biologic processes, pathogenic processes, or pharmacological responses to a therapeutic intervention.31 A composite biomarker is a combination of 2 or more biomarkers that are combined in a stated algorithm to reach a single interpretive readout. When the biomarker is used as a reliable substitute for a clinically meaningful end-point, then it is defined as a surrogate endpoint or surrogate biomarker.3234 This hierarchical distinction between biomarkers, and the importance of defining surrogate biomarkers, is significant as the majority of biomarkers studied fail to meet the stringent criteria required to serve as reliable surrogates for meaningful end-points.35

Biomarkers can be broadly classified into four main types: diagnostic, prognostic, predictive, and pharmacodynamic, each of which requires a separate set of operating properties to be assessed prior to their potential implementation as surrogate biomarkers.3237 Validity – the extent to which an instrument truly measures the outcome that it is intended to assess; reliability – the consistency or repeatability of an instrument; responsiveness – the ability to detect a meaningful change in health status; and feasibility – the ease with which an instrument can be utilized in a given setting, are essential operating properties of robust evaluative instruments.37 These properties help to ensure an accurate and consistent evaluation of key outcomes across treatment interventions and patient sub-groups, while minimizing clinical trial size requirements by reducing placebo rates and enrollment bias. These operating properties can be assessed through a process of validation, which requires demonstration that the surrogate end-point (i.e. surrogate biomarker) correlates with the true clinical outcome and it captures the net effect of treatment on the clinical outcome.3841

With these definitions in mind, we can critically examine quantitative imaging properties measured by MRI and MRE as extrinsic surrogate biomarkers of intrinsic pathologic processes (hepatic steatosis and fibrosis), as well as evaluate their potential roles as surrogate biomarkers or surrogate composite biomarkers in clinical trials and clinical practice for NAFLD. The following sections will discuss the performance characteristics of MRI- and MRE-based properties as biomarkers of hepatic steatosis and fibrosis, and the available evidence for validation of these biomarkers.

MRI-based assessment of hepatic steatosis

Technical considerations: Quantifying hepatic steatosis through proton density fat fraction (PDFF)

In contrast to other imaging techniques such as ultrasound and computed tomography, which use proxies to assess hepatic steatosis (i.e. attenuation and echogenicity), magnetic resonance quantifies hepatic steatosis by measuring the proton density fat fraction (PDFF) which is the fraction of MRI-visible protons bound to fat divided by all protons in the liver (bound to fat and water). Chemical shift imaging is applied to separate the liver signal into its water and fat signal components by acquiring gradient echoes at appropriately spaced echo times. A low flip angle is used to minimize T1 bias, and multiple echoes are acquired to correct for T2* effects.23, 4248 In some variants of this approach, only the magnitude data is retained while the phase data is discarded; these variants accurately quantify the hepatic PDFF from 0 to 50%, which fortuitously captures the biological range of human hepatic steatosis, which rarely exceeds 50%.23 More sophisticated variants retain the phase data as well as the magnitude data to estimate PDFF across the full dynamic range (0–100%) of fat content in any tissue. Both variants are reproducible across MR scanners and field strengths,4954 and can be readily interpreted in clinical practice. (Figure 1)

Figure 1. Principles of MRI-PDFF assessment and quantification of hepatic steatosis.

Figure 1

Moving left to right in the figure, you will first find the complex method of estimating PDFF, which acquires real and imaginary images to generate a PDFF map from 0–100%, labeled “C-MRI PDFF” here. Next are the magnitude images which are squared to generate a PDFF map from 0–50%, labeled “M-MRI PDFF” here. Both techniques acquire multiple images at echo times optimally spaced for fat water separation and T2* signal decay correction, and both apply a multi peak spectral model to correct for multi-frequency interference effects of fat proton signals. Note that for magnitude based PDFF, the calculated image only has a range of 0 to 50%. This is within the typical biological limits of liver fat content.

Validity – diagnostic accuracy and consistency across sub-populations

To be a useful diagnostic biomarker, MRI-PDFF must demonstrate a high degree of accuracy in identifying hepatic steatosis and quantifying the degree of steatosis throughout the liver in all sub-populations, as compared to the currently accepted gold standard (i.e. histology using the NASH-CRN scoring system55). Permutt et al.29 and Tang et al.53 demonstrated a strong correlation between MRI-PDFF and histology (r2=0.54, p<0.001 and p = 0.69, p<0.001, respectively) and Tang et al.53 further demonstrated that MRI based PDFF assessments had a high diagnostic accuracy (area under curve (AUC): 0.989, 95% CI 0.968 – 1.000) for differentiating between the presence (≥ 1 NASH-CRN grade) or absence (0 NASH-CRN grade) of hepatic steatosis. The diagnostic accuracy of MRI-PDFF was further validated by Idilman et al.56 and Bannas et al. 57, both of which demonstrated that MRI based PDFF assessments correlated closely with histology as assessed by liver biopsy (r = 0.82) and explant ex vivo histology assessment (r = 0.85). The consistency of application across sub-populations has also been validated by several studies demonstrating that key characteristics (age, sex, body mass index), disease components (histologic inflammation, co-existing hepatic conditions, or iron deposition) and technical factors (magnetic field strength) have no appreciable impact on the diagnostic accuracy of MRI-based PDFF assessments in NAFLD. 46, 58, 59 (Table 1) Thus, MRI-PDFF is a robust, quantitative, non-invasive, imaging-based diagnostic biomarker which can be used to improve the efficiency, increase the success rate, and decrease the required sample size of clinical trials by reducing heterogeneity in disease classification.

Table 1.

Diagnostic accuracy of MRI-PDFF for grading hepatic steatosis

Design Patient Characteristics Reference Standard MRI-PDFF cut-off Accuracy/Correlation
Permutt et al.29 Cross-sectional,
prospective
cohort
51 adult; biopsy proven
NAFLD; AST/ALT above
ULN; no alternative
etiology
Liver biopsy NASH-
CRN histology;
single blinded liver
pathologist
Grade 1: 8.9%
Grade 2: 16.3%
Grade 3: 25%
r2 =0.56; patients with
stage 4 fibrosis had
lower quantified
steatosis
Tang et al.53 Cross-sectional,
prospective
cohort
77 adult and pediatric;
biopsy proven NAFLD; no
alternative etiology
Liver biopsy NASH-
CRN histology;
blinded liver
pathologist
Grade 1: 6.4%
Grade 2: 17.4%
Grade 3: 22.1%
AUC 0.989 grade 1;
AUC 0.825 ≥ grade 2;
AUC 0.893 ≥ grade 3
Idilman et al.56 Retrospective,
cohort
70 adult; biopsy proven
NAFLD; no alternative
etiology
Liver biopsy NASH-
CRN histology;
blinded liver
pathologist
Grade 2/3: 15% AUC 0.950 ≥ grade 2;
correlation decreased
when fibrosis present
Bannas et al.57 Cross-sectional,
prospective
cohort
13 liver donors where
livers were deemed
unsuitable for transplant
Five core biopsies
from 9 segments
(45 cores per liver);
NASH-CRN
histology; 2 blinded
liver pathologists
n/a Strong correlation with
histology (r2=0.850),
smaller variance for
MRI-PDFF than for
histologic steatosis
Heba ER et al.58 Retrospective,
cohort
506 adult; biopsy proven
or suspected NAFLD; no
alternative etiology
Right lobe magnetic
resonance
spectroscopy
n/a 2-D echo least accurate,
3-D echo most
accurate, results
influenced by BMI and
gender (males)

NAFLD: non-alcoholic fatty liver disease; NASH: non-alcoholic steatohepatitis; AUC: area under the curve; r2 = correlation coefficient

Reliability – Intra- and inter-examination reproducibility

The spatial variability in steatosis creates the potential for sampling error with liver biopsies, which may result in staging inaccuracies.13, 14, 22 Thus, the precision with which MRI-based PDFF assessments quantify hepatic steatosis, and the reproducibility of these estimates across observations, is significant. Negrete et al.60 demonstrated that MRI-based PDFF assessments showed excellent inter-examination precision for each hepatic segment (ICC ≥ 0.992; SD ≤ 0.66%; range ≤ 1.24%), each hepatic lobe (ICC ≥ 0.998; SD ≤ 0.34%; range ≤ 0.64%), and the whole liver (ICC = 0.999; SD ≤ 0.24%; range ≤ 0.45%). Tyagi et al.61 subsequently demonstrated that magnitude-based MRI, complex-based MRI, and MRS all had high intra- and inter-examination precision for PDFF assessments (ICC ≥ 0.990 and SD < 0.50% for all three techniques and for both intra- and inter-examination precision analyses). Bannas et al.57 further demonstrated that intra- and inter-observer agreement, along with repeatability, all showed a significantly smaller variance for MRI-PDFF than for histologic steatosis grading (p < 0.001).

These data demonstrate that MRI-PDFF is not only accurate in quantifying hepatic steatosis, but it has a high degree of precision and reproducibility, as well as greater reliability than histologic assessments. As the SDs of repeated MRI-PDFF measures have consistently been < 1%, these studies suggest that MRI-PDFF can reliably detect longitudinal changes as small as 2% points, and possibly smaller. Furthermore, meaningful differences in precision were greatest at the segmental level and lowest at the whole-liver level which may influence study power for detecting longitudinal changes depending on the anatomic level and number of averaged regions of interest (ROI) obtained.

Responsiveness – co-localizing regions of interest (ROI)

To be a useful pharmacodynamic biomarker, MRI-PDFF must demonstrate longitudinal changes that correlate with true biologic responses and/or meaningful clinical outcomes. In a prospective randomized double-blinded, placebo controlled trial Le et al.62 randomized 50 patients with biopsy-proven NASH to colesevelam or placebo and looked at changes in hepatic steatosis as measured by MRI-PDFF and MRS at 24 weeks. To account for the variability in precision when quantifying hepatic steatosis at the segmental level, the authors recorded MRI-PDFF assessments in 3 co-localized ROI (~300 – 400 mm2) in each of the 9 liver segments (27 separate ROI) at baseline and follow-up. (Figure 2A) For each segment, the three PDFF measurements were averaged and the authors validated the responsiveness and accuracy of changes over time against MRS. When using MRI-PDFF as the outcome measure, colesevelam increased hepatic steatosis in all nine-segments of the liver with a mean difference of 5.6% (p = 0.002), and MRI-PDFF correlated strongly with MRS-PDFF (r2=0.96, p<0.001). In contrast, liver biopsy-based assessment of hepatic steatosis did not detect any treatment effect. A secondary analysis by Noureddin et al.63 further demonstrated that patients who had an increase or decrease in MRI-PDFF of ≥ 1% showed a parallel increase or decrease in their body weight and serum alanine and aspartate aminotransferases at week 24 (p < 0.05), and this small increase or decrease in hepatic steatosis could not be detected with liver biopsy-based histology assessments.

Figure 2. Co-localization of regions of interest and responsiveness of MRI-PDFF and MRE.

Figure 2

Figure 2

Figures adapted and modified from Loomba et al.119 Figure 2A: Anatomical co-localization of regions of interest. Figure 2B: Whole liver fat mapping with magnetic resonance imaging proton density fat fraction (MRI-PDFF) at weeks 0 and 24. Figure 2C: Whole liver fibrosis mapping with magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) at weeks 0 and 24.

Together these studies demonstrate that MRI-PDFF is highly responsive to changes in hepatic steatosis, this change in MRI-PDFF assessments over time correlates to a true biologic response (change in liver enzymes) and meaningful clinical outcome (change in body weight), and co-localization of ROIs is needed to ensure a high degree of accuracy for quantifying change over time. Additionally, since MRI-PDFF is more sensitive to longitudinal change in steatosis than biopsy with histology scoring, it is more likely to detect both positive and adverse therapeutic responses, providing further support for its use as a surrogate biomarker of hepatic steatosis.

Comparative effectiveness of MRI-PDFF over other imaging modalities for quantifying steatosis and integration in routine clinical practice

MRS assesses PDFF directly through a measurement of differences in water and fat peaks on a resonance frequency domain.51, 64, 65 Since MRS assesses water and fat content more directly than MRI, which estimates their content by analyzing time-dependent oscillations in the MR signal, it is considered to be potentially more accurate. There are, however, several limitations to MRS-PDFF assessments that warrant consideration. (Table 2) First, similar to liver biopsy, MRS data is typically collected from a single region or voxel positioned by the operator in the liver parenchyma using anatomic landmarks depicted by conventional imaging. Thus, similar to liver biopsies, MRS evaluates a small portion of the liver to quantify steatosis (although the ~ 8cm3 MRS voxel is orders of magnitude than a typical core biopsy) and does not depict the distribution of steatosis throughout the liver parencyhma.17 Second, the complexity of MRS requires significant expertise for its acquisition and analysis, and it is not readily available on all scanners, which limits its routine application in clinical trials and clinical practice. Finally, although MRS is considered to be potentially more accurate, the diagnostic accuracy, reliability, and responsiveness of MRI-PDFF assessments have consistently been demonstrated to be highly correlated with MRS-based PDFF assessments across multiple studies.5, 27, 58, 6163 Thus, the ease of implementation, similarity in operating performance as compared to MRS, and ability to quantify hepatic steatosis throughout the liver, makes MRI-based PDFF assessment an attractive alternative to MRS-based assessments.

Table 2.

Comparison of imaging based assessments of hepatic steatosis in NAFLD

MRS MRI Ultrasound CAP
Measurement Directly measures
differences in water and
fat peaks on a resonance
frequency domain
Indirect CSI assessment of
signal interface between
water and fat peaks during
OP and IP echoes
Assessment through
proxies (i.e. attenuation
and echogenicity)
VCTE guided assessment
using a ultrasonic
controlled attenuation
parameter algorithm
Dynamic Range Single area (8cm3 voxel)
manually placed in liver
parenchyma using 3-plane
localizing imaging
Quantification over a full
dynamic range (0 – 100%)
throughout parenchyma
Limited when overall
content of hepatic
steatosis is < 20%
Sub-optimal quantification
over a broad dynamic
range in ROI
Application Not available on routine
scanners and requires
expertise
Readily applied to routine
scanners with some
expertise required
Readily available in routine
practice for use
Point of care testing
Accuracy High diagnostic accuracy
not significantly impacted
by demographics,
histologic activity, or co-
xisting hepatic conditions
High diagnostic accuracy
not significantly impacted
by demographics,
histologic activity, or co-
existing hepatic conditions
Modest diagnostic
accuracy; significantly
limited by demographics
(obesity), and co-existing
hepatic conditions
Higher diagnostic accuracy
than standard ultrasound
based assessments but
lower than MRI; limited by
obesity, inflammation,
stage of fibrosis
Reliability High precision with
minimal variability
Higher precision and lower
variability than MRS and
histologic assessments
Modest reliability and
agreement with training
Improved precision and
reduced variability than
ultrasound through
assessment of acquisition
validity but lower than
MRI
Responsiveness Responsive to changes in
steatosis in single area
Highly responsive to
changes in steatosis
throughout parenchyma
Limited responsiveness
and unable to co-localize
ROI for response
Improved responsiveness
over standard ultrasound
Co-localization
of fibrosis
Requires alternative
imaging modality for co-
localizing elasticity
Co-localization with MRE Unable to co-localize Co-localization with VCTE

MRS: magnetic resonance spectroscopy; MRI-PDFF: magnetic resonance imaging proton density fat fraction; NAFLD: nonalcoholic fatty liver disease; CSI: chemical shift imaging; OP: opposed phase; IP: in-phase; MRE: magnetic resonance elastography; ROI: regions of interest; CAP: controlled attenuation parameter; VCTE: vibration controlled transient elastography

One of the major criticisms with MRI based-PDFF assessments is the equipment and cost associated with MRI scanners, along with the technical expertise required to perform and interpret readings. Thus, several investigators have begun to evaluate the potential utility of ultrasound, a non-invasive and readily available tool, for quantifying hepatic steatosis.66 Although several specific features have been identified to be unique to NAFLD when using ultrasound, and the inter-observer agreement for identifying these features has been shown to be relatively good, the sensitivity of these findings is considerably lower when the overall content of hepatic steatosis is < 20%.6775 Furthermore, patient demographics (obesity) and co-existing conditions (hepatitis C) have been shown to further reduce the sensitivity of this diagnostic tool,7579 which significantly impacts its ability to reliability distinguish between the presence or absence of hepatic steatosis among at-risk individuals.

Newer quantitative ultrasound-based techniques have emerged and have been shown to be highly correlated with MRI-PDFF assessments (Spearman ρ = 0.80; P < .0001),80 and the most studied of these techniques is the controlled attenuation parameter (CAP) based assessments. By concomitantly assessing hepatic steatosis and liver stiffness through transient elastography, CAP based ultrasound assessments have been shown to provide a more accurate assessment of hepatic steatosis across a wide range of patient populations.8087 Recently, a direct comparison between MRI-PDFF and CAP for quantify hepatic steatosis was performed, and MRI-PDFF was demonstrated to be more accurate for the detection of grade 1 steatosis (MRI-PDFF: AUC 0.98, 95% CI 0.96 – 1.00 vs. CAP: AUC 0.88, 95% CI 0.80 – 0.95), for differentiating between grade 1 and 2 steatosis (MRI-PDFF: AUC 0.90, 95% CI: 0.81 – 0.98 vs. CAP: AUC 0.73, 95% CI: 0.64 – 0.81), and for differentiating between grade 2 and 3 steatosis (MRI-PDFF: AUC 0.79, 95% CI: 0.64 – 0.95 vs. CAP: AUC 0.70, 95% CI: 0.58 – 0.83).88 Thus, although ultrasound may be an inexpensive diagnostic tool for use in clinical practice with modest diagnostic accuracy, MRI-PDFF remains the most accurate diagnostic tool available for quantifying hepatic steatosis and the enhanced accuracy associated with this imaging modality will help to overcome its expense by avoiding the excess costs associated with complications from false positive or false negative results. If MRI-PDFF is not readily available for routine clinical use, then its greatest value in clinical practice will come in those individuals identified to be at risk for progression to NASH or NASH related complications, and a therapeutic intervention is planned. A baseline and follow-up assessment 6 months later, at a referral center with expertise in MRI-PDFF, will help to ensure the most accurate quantification of disease severity and response to therapy which has implications on the long-term disease related morbidity and mortality.

Importance of fibrosis when quantifying hepatic steatosis: the need for a composite biomarker

It is important to note that, although MRI-PDFF is a highly accurate, reliable, and responsive diagnostic tool for quantifying hepatic steatosis in NAFLD, its application as a biomarker in patients with more advanced liver disease is limited by the severity of fibrosis present. 29, 56 Permutt et al.29 demonstrated that average MRI-determined PDFF and histology-determined steatosis grade remained relatively stable at fibrosis stage 0–3, but dropped significantly at stage 4. Schwimmer et al.89 similarly demonstrated that the correlation between MRI-PDFF and histology was significantly (P < 0.01) weaker in children with stage 2–4 fibrosis (0.61) than children with no fibrosis (0.76) or stage 1 fibrosis (0.78). Thus, if MRI-PDFF is to be used for assessing response to therapy in patients with more aggressive and advanced disease courses, a concomitant biomarker based-assessment of fibrosis will be needed. It is likely that MRE-based stiffness measurements may address this need, as discussed below.

MRE based assessment of hepatic fibrosis

Technical considerations: Quantifying hepatic fibrosis

Fibrosis has no molecular signature that can be detected by current imaging techniques, and all imaging tests for fibrosis attempt to detect fibrosis indirectly. As collagen deposition associated with fibrosis imparts parenchymal rigidity, the leading biomarker for assessing fibrosis is through elastography. MRE uses a modified phase-contrast pulse sequence to visualize rapidly propagating mechanical shear waves (typically delivered at around 60 Hz).90 Cross-sectional elastogram images are then created depicting the stiffness generated from the wave propagation information. Technically, elastography assessments can be accomplished with most MR scanners by adding hardware to generate mechanical waves and adding specific software for acquisition and processing.90 Because the waves can be visualized and analyzed deep into the liver, MRE evaluates a large portion of the liver and can be performed in conjunction with conventional MRI.

Validity and Reliability – diagnostic accuracy and reproducibility for quantifying hepatic fibrosis

Several individual studies have investigated the diagnostic accuracy of MRE for quantifying hepatic fibrosis in NAFLD, and a recent pooled analysis of individual participant level data has demonstrated that MRE has a high diagnostic accuracy (AUC 0.90, 95% CI 0.84 – 0.94) for identifying advanced fibrosis (stage 3–4). 25, 26, 30, 9194 (Table 3) Although the diagnostic accuracy has been demonstrated to be consistent across patient sub-groups (obesity, gender) and disease states (inflammation grade, liver stiffness), a recent prospective cohort study has demonstrated that more advanced versions of the imaging modality (3-dimensional MRE at 40Hz) are more accurate (AUC 0.981) as compared to more traditional modalities (3D-MRE at 60Hz AUC: 0.927; 2D-MRE at 40Hz AUC: 0.921).94 The inter-observer agreement in assessments for MRE has been demonstrated to be high (ICC 0.99, 95% CI 0.98 – 1.00), and the agreement for MRE assessments is higher than that with pathologist staging (ICC 0.91, 95% CI 0.86 – 0.94).95 Thus, MRE is highly accurate for detecting hepatic fibrosis, results are not influenced by patient demographics making assessments reproducible across key sub-populations, and the inter-observer agreement for staging fibrosis is nearly perfect and higher than that seen with histopathology. For these reasons, MRE is considered to be a reliable, highly accurate, and precise method for assessing hepatic fibrosis.30

Table 3.

Diagnostic accuracy of MRE for grading fibrosis

Design Patient Characteristics Reference Standard MRE cut-off Accuracy/Correlation
Loomba et al.30 Cross-sectional,
prospective
cohort,
comparative
effectiveness
117; biopsy proven
NAFLD, no alternative
etiology
Liver biopsy NASH-
CRN histology;
blinded liver
pathologist;
5-point scale (0–4);
3–4=advanced
Stage 1: 3.02 Kpa
Stage 2: 3.58 Kpa
Stage 3: 3.64 Kpa
Stage 4: 4.67 Kpa
AUC 0.838 ≥ Stage 1
AUC 0.856 ≥ Stage 2
AUC 0.924 ≥ Stage 3
AUC 0.894 ≥ Stage 4
Kim et al.91 Retrospective
cohort
142; biopsy proven NAFLD
within 1 year of MRE, no
alternative etiology
Livery biopsy Brunt
classification;
blinded liver
pathologist;
5-point scale (0–4);
3–4=advanced
Stage 0–2 vs. 3–4:
4.15 Kpa
AUC 0.954 ≥ Stage 3;
Improved accuracy as
compared to FIB-4,
NAFLD fibrosis score,
AST/ALT ratio, APRI or
BARD score
Cui et al.25 Cross-sectional,
prospective
cohort,
comparative
effectiveness
102; biopsy proven
NAFLD; no alternative
etiology
Liver biopsy NASH-
CRN histology;
blinded liver
pathologist;
5-point scale (0–4);
3–4=advanced
3.64 Kpa had 92%
sensitivity and 90%
specificity for
predicting
advanced fibrosis
AUC 0.957 ≥ Stage 3;
Significantly (p < 0.05)
better than FIB-4, Lok
index, AST/ALT ratio,
NAFLD fibrosis score,
APRI, BARD, NASH
CRN model, Bonacini
score
Chen et al.93 Retrospective
cohort
58; biopsy proven NAFLD
within 90 days of MRE, no
alternative etiology
Livery biopsy Brunt
classification;
blinded liver
pathologist;
5-point scale (0–4);
3–4=advanced
Stage 0: 2.71 Kpa
Stage 1: 3.43 Kpa
Stage 2: 4.58 Kpa
Stage 3: 5.55 Kpa
Stage 4: 5.82 Kpa
Correlation coefficient
for liver stiffness with
fibrosis stage of 0.651
Loomba et al.94 Cross-sectional,
prospective
cohort,
comparative
effectiveness
100; biopsy proven
NAFLD; no alternative
etiology
Liver biopsy NASH-
CRN histology;
blinded liver
pathologist;
5-point scale (0–4);
3–4=advanced
Stage 0–2 vs. 3–4
2D (60Hz):3.8 Kpa
3D (60Hz):3.4 Kpa
3D (40Hz):2.4 Kpa
Stage 0–2 vs. 3–4
2D (60Hz): AUC 0.921
3D (60Hz): AUC 0.927
3D (40Hz): AUC 0.981
Singh et al.92 Systematic
review
232; biopsy proven
NAFLD, individual
participant level data
Liver biopsy;
5-point scale (0–4);
3–4=advanced
n/a AUC 0.86 ≥ Stage 1
AUC 0.87 ≥ Stage 2
AUC 0.90 ≥ Stage 3
AUC 0.91 ≥ Stage 4

NAFLD: non-alcoholic fatty liver disease; NASH: non-alcoholic steatohepatitis; AUC: area under the curve; MRE: magnetic resonance elastography

Validity – diagnostic accuracy for identifying NASH among NAFLD patients

Although not a requirement for the diagnosis,96 the presence of fibrosis may help to identify patients with NASH and nearly 40% of NASH patients will progress to advanced stages of fibrosis in as little as 3 years.97101 For these reasons it has been suggested that liver biopsy be performed in all NAFLD patients to identify NASH patients earlier in the disease course so therapeutic interventions may be implored to reduce overall morbidity and mortality.101 Chen et al.93 demonstrated that MRE-based assessments of liver stiffness may have a high diagnostic accuracy (AUC 0.93) for differentiating NASH from simple steatosis, with a cut-off of 2.74 kPa yielding a sensitivity of 94% with a specificity of 73%. Furthermore, MRE-based assessments of liver stiffness increased with NASH severity independent of the presence of fibrosis. Although this would suggest that MRE may allow for the early identification of patients with NASH, even before fibrosis has begun, it needs to be interpreted with caution as this was a single center retrospective study in a small cohort of individuals. Thus further validation in prospective cohorts is needed, but these results are promising as the early identification of NASH patients prior to the onset of fibrosis would be of significant clinical importance and it would allow for prognostic and predictive enrichment of clinical trials with resultant increases in effect sizes. This would be ideal for early proof-of-concept studies where an enhanced benefit-to-risk relationship determination is needed, and in prevention trials aimed at halting progression to fibrosis where an accurate identification of patients at risk for progressing is needed.

Comparative effectiveness with other imaging modalities

Similar to MRI-based assessment of hepatic steatosis, consideration has been given to preferentially using ultrasound-based assessments of hepatic fibrosis given their ease of implementation and relative inexpensiveness. Ultrasound-based elastography methods can be classified as strain elastrography which looks at the distribution of strain but does not yet permit reproducible measurements, or shear wave elastrography which monitors the propagation of shear waves in the tissue.102, 103 Among shear wave technologies the most widely studied and compared to MRE are transient elastrography (TE), and point wave shear elastography utilizing acoustic radiation force impulse imaging (ARFI).14 Similar to their application for assessing hepatic steatosis, ultrasound-based techniques have a lower diagnostic accuracy as compared to MRE for assessing hepatic fibrosis (TE: AUC 0.82; ARFI: AUC 0.85) or cirrhosis (TE: AUC 0.92; ARFI: AUC 0.93).88, 104107 Direct comparison studies in heterogenous study populations have also shown that MRE-based assessments have higher completion rates, and they provide significantly more reliable measurements of liver stiffness.107110 Furthermore, ultrasound-based techniques only evaluate a portion of the liver, are technically challenging in obese patients or those with significant ascites, are operator dependent, and can be influenced by inflammatory activity or hepatic congestion.111118 This is by far the most important limitation to its use in clinical practice, and given the importance heterogeneity of disease classification has on power calculations and study designs for therapeutic interventional trials, MRE represents a potentially important non-invasive tool for accurately identifying and quantify the severity of fibrosis in clinical trials.118

Feasibility of using MRI-PDFF and MRE as composite biomarkers in clinical trials and clinical practice

One of the final operating properties requiring validation is the feasibility of application, in both clinical trials and clinical practice. The feasibility of assessing both MRI-PDFF and MRE as composite biomarkers in clinical trials was established by the MOZART trial.119 In a randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled trial, 50 patients with biopsy-proven NASH were randomized to either ezetimibe 10 mg orally daily or placebo for 24 weeks. The authors assessed both MRI-PDFF and MRE and demonstrated that the application of co-localization of MRI-PDFF-derived fat maps and MRE-derived stiffness maps of the liver before and after treatment to noninvasively assess treatment response in NASH was feasible. (Figure 2B, Figure 2C) In clinical practice, Doycheva et al.120 assessed the feasibility of screening for NAFLD with MRI-PDFF in the primary care setting and determined that the prevalence of NAFLD among type 2 diabetics was 65%. By concomitantly assessing for hepatic fibrosis with MRE, they were further able to establish that the prevalence of advanced fibrosis among type 2 diabetics was 7%. Among those with advanced fibrosis, nearly a quarter had an MRI-PDFF assessment of < 5%. Thus, had the authors used only MRI-PDFF to screen for NAFLD they may have under-estimated the true burden of disease and severity in this population. This study helps to provide the foundation for the feasibility of using MRI-PDFF and MRE in clinical practice and highlights the importance of assessing steatosis and fibrosis simultaneously, but will need to be re-produced in subsequent studies and it will need to be compared to alternative screening modalities that are more widely available and potentially more cost-effective (i.e. CAP).121

Future Considerations

Although MRI-PDFF and MRE offer accurate non-invasive assessments of hepatic steatosis and fibrosis, the implementation of these imaging modalities in clinical practice has been limited by technical feasibility and time required to complete the test. More recently, a newer imaging modality using a multiparametric MR imaging (T1 and T2* mapping) and proton spectroscopy approach has been studied in a blinded prospective fashion and was demonstrated to be highly correlated with liver biopsies with regards to the presence of steatosis (Spearman r = 0.89, AUC 0.93) and fibrosis (Spearman r = 0.62, AUC 0.90).122 Although this imaging modality will still require further validation it offers a promising transition for using MRI for routine monitoring and assessments in clinical practice given the scan can be accomplished in approximately 23 minutes and it simultaneously assesses steatosis and fibrosis.

Summary

In conclusion, magnetic resonance imaging-based techniques are now available for non-invasive, accurate, reproducible, and precise quantification of hepatic steatosis and fibrosis through proton density fat fraction (MRI-PDFF) and elastography (MRE) assessments, respectively. These biomarkers have been demonstrated to be highly accurate, reliable, and responsive indices in NAFLD, and they carry several distinct advantages over other invasive (liver biopsy) and non-invasive (MRS and ultrasound) assessment techniques. The optimal approach to utilizing them in clinical trials will require a co-localization of regions of interests for both hepatic steatosis and fibrosis in order to accurately identify at risk populations where therapeutic interventions will be of greatest value, and to quantify longitudinal changes with therapeutic interventions. This approach can be directly translated into clinical practice, where non-invasive screening and monitoring protocols can be developed to address the growing epidemic of NAFLD in the community.

Key Point Box.

  • MRI-PDFF is a robust, quantitative, accurate, and reproducible non-invasive biomarker for the assessment of NAFLD

  • Co-localized assessment of quantitative changes in liver fat content provides more precise estimates of changes in liver fat to assess treatment response in NASH trials

  • MRE is emerging to be an accurate, reproducible and quantitative non-invasive biomarker for the assessment of advanced fibrosis in NAFLD

  • MRE is superior than ARFI and VCTE is assessment of hepatic fibrosis, especially in obese

Acknowledgments

Guarantor(s) of the article: Rohit Loomba

Conflicts and Disclosures: PSD is supported by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases training grant 5T32DK007202. RL is supported in part by the American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) Foundation – Sucampo – ASP Designated Research Award in Geriatric Gastroenterology and by a T. Franklin Williams Scholarship Award. Funding provided by: Atlantic Philanthropies, Inc, the John A. Hartford Foundation, OM, the Association of Specialty Professors, and the American Gastroenterological Association and grant K23-DK090303. Both CBS and RL are supported by R01DK106419. CBS is also supported by R01DK088925

Abbreviations

MRI

magnetic resonance imaging

MRE

magnetic resonance elastography

PDFF

proton density fat fraction

MRS

magnetic resonance spectroscopy

NAFLD

nonalcoholic fatty liver disease

NAFL

nonalcoholic fatty liver

NASH

nonalcoholic steatohepatitis

ICC

intraclass correlation coefficient

SD

standard deviation

CI

confidence interval

VCTE

vibration controlled transient elastrography

TE-CAP

Transient elastography based controlled attenuation parameter

ARFI

acoustic radiation force impulse imaging

Footnotes

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Author Contribution:
  • Acquisition and interpretation of data: PSD, CBS, RL
  • Drafting of the manuscript: PSD
  • Critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content: CBS, RL
  • Approval of the final manuscript: PSD, CBS, RL

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