ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: To assess the diagnostic and prognostic usefulness of the serum matrix metallopeptidase-7 (MMP-7) level for biliary atresia in infants with cholestasis after hepatoportoenterostomy. STUDY DESIGN: We enrolled 100 infants with cholestasis (age, 43.56 ± 1.97 days; 62 males) with a direct bilirubin level of >1 mg/dL, of whom 36 (36%) were diagnosed with biliary atresisa. The MMP-7 levels in serum samples collected during the cholestasis workup and 6 months after hepatoportoenterostomy were assessed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. We quantified liver fibrosis by Picro Sirius red staining of collagen in specimens from the 81 infants with cholestasis. RESULTS: Infants with biliary atresisa had a significantly higher serum MMP-7 level than that of non-biliary atresisa infants with cholestasis of equivalent age (P < .0001). Receiver operating characteristic analysis showed that a serum MMP-7 level of >1.43 ng/mL was predictive of biliary atresisa in infants with cholestasis (diagnostic accuracy, 88%). There was a positive correlation between the serum MMP-7 level and the severity of liver fibrosis (P = .0002). Survival analysis showed that the frequency of liver transplantation was significantly higher in infants with biliary atresisa with a serum MMP-7 level of >10.30 ng/mL compared with a serum MMP-7 level of ≤10.30 ng/mL after hepatoportoenterostomy (hazard ratio, 4.22; P = .02). CONCLUSIONS: The serum MMP-7 level, which reflects the severity of liver fibrosis and can be determined noninvasively, may facilitate the diagnosis of biliary atresisa among infants with cholestasis. Moreover, the serum MMP-7 level after hepatoportoenterostomy is associated with a need for liver transplantation in infants with biliary atresisa.