Background: Prospective data regarding the safety and yield of liver biopsy in both adults and children with chronic hepatitis B are limited. The aim of this study is to report safety, yield, and complication rates among adults and children with chronic hepatitis B undergoing percutaneous liver biopsy.
Methods: Data on the indication for procedural characteristics and complication rate for liver biopsies performed as part of the Hepatitis B Research Network were prospectively recorded on a study case report form and analyzed in aggregate.
Results: Among 2506 adult and pediatric subjects enrolled in the Hepatitis B Research Network between 2011 and 2018, 465 (19%) underwent 491 liver biopsies for clinical or research reasons. Adequate liver tissue was obtained in 98% of the procedures. In total, there were 32 complications reported for 24 biopsies: 23 biopsies with 30 complications in adults and 1 biopsy with 2 complications in children. Pain (n=19) and vasovagal reaction (n=6) were the most common complications. There were 7 serious adverse events, including an arterioportal venous fistula, a pneumothorax, 4 cases of bleeding, and severe pain with no associated condition. There were no deaths.
Conclusions: These data demonstrate that percutaneous liver biopsy is associated with a high yield of tissue (98%) and a rate of serious complications of 1.4% in both children and adults with chronic HBV. These results support the focused use of liver biopsy in the evaluation of novel treatments in development for chronic hepatitis B.
Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.