• Funded by the Horizon Europe programme, under GA No. 101113193

Multimodal Diagnostic Imaging of Metabolic Dysfunction–Associated Steatotic Liver Disease: Noninvasive Analyses by Photoacoustic Ultrasound and Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Authors

Alissa Keegan, Gayathri Malamal, Yichien Lee, Kyle Korolowicz, Blythe D. Shepard, Carolyn M. Ecelbarger, Mariana Moya Rubiano, Maria Laura Avantaggiati, Moshe Levi, Laurie Rich, Massimo Alfano, Avi Rosenberg, Stanley Fricke, Chris Albanese, Jithin Jose, Olga Rodriguez.

Published in The American Journal of Pathology, Volume 195, Issue 5, May 2025.

Abstract

Chronic diseases of the liver are major public health concerns worldwide. Steatosis and steatohepatitis associated with alcoholic liver disease, metabolic dysfunction–associated fatty liver disease/nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, and hepatitis B and C contribute to chronic diseases of the liver. Liver fibrosis occurs in all forms of advanced chronic diseases of the liver, the confirmation of which is typically performed by needle biopsy. Imaging approaches for liver diagnosis exist but do not provide sufficient diagnostic accuracy for defining the various stages of fibrosis or steatosis. Therefore, there is a need for improved imaging capabilities to enhance disease diagnosis. Ultrasonography-based photoacoustic imaging has recently emerged as a noninvasive, nonionizing modality, capable of capturing structural details and oxygen saturation changes during disease progression. However, its potential for detecting surrogate metabolic dysfunction–associated fatty liver disease markers, such as collagen and lipids, which are often poorly resolved by other conventional imaging techniques, has yet to be investigated in detail. The novelty of this study lies in the innovative use of spectral photoacoustic imaging for the direct detection and quantification of key biomarkers of liver disease, such as fibrosis, collagen, lipids, and oxygenated and deoxygenated hemoglobin, in a mouse model of steatotic fatty liver disease. Ultrasonography-based photoacoustic imaging, validated with magnetic resonance imaging, effectively identified increases in liver adiposity and fibrosis, enabling the noninvasive detection of changes in liver pathology associated with metabolic dysfunction.