Liver biopsy quality criteria to exclude cirrhosis in case of suspicion of porto-sinusoidal vascular disorder
JHEP Reports
Publication date : 09 November 2025
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhepr.2025.101670
Authors :
Chloé de Broucker Paradis Valérie Maria Luisa Botero Albuquerque Miguel Payancé Audrey Plessier Aurélie Elkrief Laure Durand François Sophie Hillaire Paul-Emile Zafar Juan Carlos Garcia Pagan Rautou Pierre-Emmanuel
Baveno VII guidelines based porto-sinusoidal vascular disorder (PSVD) diagnosis on a liver biopsy excluding cirrhosis. However, evidence-based quality criteria for liver biopsy are lacking. This study aimed to determine biopsy length and staining appropriate to rule out cirrhosis.
Liver explants from 12 patients with cirrhosis and 12 with PSVD were selected. Slides were stained with Picrosirius red or Masson’s trichrome. A total of 36,000 virtual liver biopsies were randomly generated, including different biopsy widths (572 and 1,000 μm corresponding to transjugular and percutaneous biopsies, respectively) and lengths (5 mm, 10 mm, 15 mm, 20 mm, 25 mm; fragmented 5 + 10 mm and 5 + 5 + 5 mm). Biopsies were assessed by an expert pathologist for the presence or absence of cirrhosis.
Overall sensitivity of percutaneous biopsies for the diagnosis of cirrhosis was 85%, higher with Picrosirius red (86%) than with Masson’s trichrome (83%) (p <0.001). Sensitivity increased with the length of percutaneous biopsies, reaching a plateau from 15 mm (88%). Sensitivity was significantly higher for percutaneous (89%) than for transjugular biopsies (84%) (p <0.001). A plateau was also observed from 15 mm for transjugular biopsies. Fragmented biopsies with at least one 10-mm-long fragment (5 + 10 mm) had similar sensitivity as 15-mm-long biopsies. Diagnostic accuracy was lower in case of Laennec A cirrhosis, HBV-associated disease, or incomplete septal fibrosis. Validation by a second pathologist gave similar results.
For the diagnosis of PSVD, the minimum length of liver biopsy to exclude cirrhosis was 15 mm with at least one fragment of 10 mm. Picrosirius red had a better performance than Masson’s trichrome staining. The transjugular route showed lower sensitivity, but provides additional information.
This study shows that, for the diagnosis of porto-sinusoidal vascular disorder, the minimum length of liver biopsy to exclude cirrhosis is 15 mm, with a minimum fragment of 10 mm. Picrosirius red had a slightly better performance than Masson’s trichrome staining. Future guidelines might consider that a ≥15-mm-long biopsy, with a fragment ≥10 mm, is sufficient to rule out cirrhosis in case of suspicion of porto-sinusoidal vascular disorder with signs of portal hypertension.