Promising new blood test is first of its kind to detect liver scarring

09 Apr 2016

1

Newcastle University scientists and medics have developed a new type of genetic blood test that diagnoses scarring in the liver - even before someone may feel ill.

It is the first time an epigenetic signature in blood has been discovered which is diagnostic of the severity of fibrosis for people with Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD).

NAFLD, caused by being overweight or having diabetes, affects one in three people in the UK and may progress to cirrhosis and liver failure, requiring a transplant.

Scientific breakthrough
Publishing in the academic journal GUT, the Newcastle team describe the proof of principle research in which they measure specific epigenetic markers to stratify NAFLD patients into mild or severe liver scarring, known as fibrosis.

Dr Quentin Anstee, Clinical Senior Lecturer at Newcastle University, Consultant Hepatologist within the Newcastle Hospitals and joint senior author explained what it could mean for patients, "This scientific breakthrough has great promise because the majority of patients show no symptoms.

"Routine blood tests can't detect scarring of the liver and even more advanced non-invasive tests can really only detect scarring at a late stage when it is nearing cirrhosis. We currently have to rely on liver biopsy to measure fibrosis at its early stages - by examining a piece of the liver under the microscope.

"We know that the presence of even mild fibrosis of the liver predicts a worse long-term outcome for patients with NAFLD and so it's important to be able to detect liver scarring at an early stage."

Providing a scale of damage

In this first stage of research the team developed the blood analysis in 26 patients with NAFLD. The test detects chemical changes on tiny amounts of "cell-free" DNA that are released into the blood when liver cells are injured. Changes in DNA methylation at genes like PPAR? that controls scar formation are then used to stratify patients by fibrosis severity.

Senior author Dr Jelena Mann of Newcastle University's Institute for Cellular Medicine added, "This is the first time that a DNA methylation 'signature' from the blood has been shown to match the severity of a liver disease.

"It opens up the possibility of an improved blood test for liver fibrosis in the future."

Dr Timothy Hardy is a hepatology registrar within Newcastle Hospitals and a Medical Research Council-funded clinical research training fellow at the University. He conducted the research as part of his PhD project and said, "We are now working on confirming these findings in a larger group of patients.

"If we are able to accurately tell the extent of a person's liver damage with a blood test, and even track the scarring as it gets better or worse, it could provide reassurance for patients, save NHS resources and avoid patients having to undergo a liver biopsy."

This research is part of Newcastle University's response to the challenges and opportunities presented by an ageing population. Newcastle University is a world leader in the field at its Campus for Ageing and Vitality, the location for a new £40m National Centre for Ageing Science and Innovation (NASI). This research was supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre.

The research was made possible through Newcastle Academic Health Partners, a collaboration involving Newcastle Upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Northumberland, Tyne and Wear NHS Foundation Trust and Newcastle University. This partnership harnesses world-class expertise to ensure patients benefit sooner from new treatments, diagnostics and prevention strategies.

Latest articles

Global Chip Sales Expected to Hit $1 Trillion This Year, Industry Group Says

Global Chip Sales Expected to Hit $1 Trillion This Year, Industry Group Says

Citi to Match Government Seed Funding for Children’s ‘Trump Accounts’

Citi to Match Government Seed Funding for Children’s ‘Trump Accounts’

Huawei-Backed Aito Partners With UAE Dealer to Enter Middle East Market

Huawei-Backed Aito Partners With UAE Dealer to Enter Middle East Market

AI is No Bubble: Nvidia Supplier Wistron Sees Order Surge Through 2027

AI is No Bubble: Nvidia Supplier Wistron Sees Order Surge Through 2027

Tech Selloff Weighs on Asian Markets; Indonesia Slides After Moody’s Outlook Cut

Tech Selloff Weighs on Asian Markets; Indonesia Slides After Moody’s Outlook Cut

Amazon Plans $200 Billion AI Spending Surge; Shares Slide on Investor Jitters

Amazon Plans $200 Billion AI Spending Surge; Shares Slide on Investor Jitters

Server CPU Shortages Grip China as AI Boom Strains Intel and AMD Supply Chains

Server CPU Shortages Grip China as AI Boom Strains Intel and AMD Supply Chains

OpenAI launches ‘Frontier’ AI agent platform in enterprise push

OpenAI launches ‘Frontier’ AI agent platform in enterprise push

Toyota set for third straight quarterly profit drop as costs and tariffs weigh

Toyota set for third straight quarterly profit drop as costs and tariffs weigh