Autoimmune Diseases of Liver Flashcards
3 Main Diseases and How Does Ea Present?
1- autoimmune hepatitis
2- primary biliary cirrhosis/ cholangitis
3- primary sclerosing cholangitis
usually asymptomatic and found on incidental labs or non-specific symptoms (fatigue, fever, anorexia, ab discomfort, jaundice, mild pruritis) + extrahepatic autoimmune disease (US, sclerosis, Sjogren, arthritis)
How do they differ in epidemiology?
AH - mainly white women (types 2/3 more common in european women)
PBC - middle-aged white women
Primary Sclerosing Chol - more common in men and 80% have UC
Autoimmune Hepatitis Dx
- REQUIRED BIOPSY
- Histology - interface hepatitis (plasma cells + others from portal tract to interface w/ lobule) w/o lymphoid aggregates or bile duct destruction
- Labs - often hepatocellular pattern of labs (inc ALT/AST) and inc conjugated bilirubin (may also have dec albumin or inc clotting factors)
- Also see auto-antibodies but not specific (ANA, SMA, LKM-1)
PBC Dx (include 4 stages)
- Dx - AMA (anti-mito antibodies) is most sensitive and cholestatic labs (inc ALP, GGT)
- Now use specific PDC-E2 antigen of AMA (also known as M2) for diagnosis
- Histology - destructive cholangitis of only intrahepatic bile ducts (interlobular and septal ducts)
- Florid duct lesion (intraepithelial plasma cells and lymphocytes centered around ducts)
- May have granulomas
4 Stages (for prognosis)
- 1- florid duct lesion/ intra-hepatic bile duct damage - 2- ductular proliferation (spills over into interface) - 3- scarring - 4- cirrhosis (can lead to pre-sinusoid portal htn b/c fibrosis in tracts b/f sinusoids)
Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis Dx
- Cholestatic labs (inc GGT, inc ALP) but can also have 2/3x normal LFTs
- NO DEFINITE SEROLOGICAL TEST (p-ANCA is common but not specific)
- Diagnosis made by cholangiography - see both intrahepatic and extra-hepatic duct fibrosis w/ dilation of normal intervening areas of duct (beads-on-a-string)
- ERCP (dangerous), percutaneous cholangiography, MRCP - Histology - BIOPSY NOT REQUIRED; non-specific onion skinning fibrosis around ducts
Autoimmune Hepatitis Tx and Prognosis
Indications for Tx - 10X normal AST, 5X normal ALT, 2X inc IgG, severe necrosis (seen as bands of dead hepatocytes - bridging necrosis) or if very symptomatic
- DO NOT TREAT IF ALREADY CIRRHOTIC
- Prednisone or prednisone w/ azathioprine then wean off prednisone w/ time
- Treat steroid side effects - osteoporosis, DM, dec immune function, etc
- Also treat/prevent liver damage like portal HTN, jaundice, ascites, encephalopathy
- Remission = no symptoms, normal biopsy, normal labs (stop tx)
- Live normal life on immunosuppressive therapy; just deal w/ side effects
- May get liver transplant but high rate of rejection b/c autoimmune in nature
PBC Tx and Prognosis
TREATMENT
- UDCA (ursodeoxycholic acid)- dec bile acid levels to protect cell membranes
- Immunosuppressive therapy
- Treat pruritus w/ cholestryamine –> rifampin –> alternatives –> liver transplant
- Prevention - bone density tests and monitor vitamins
- Usually asymptomatic for long periods but eventually progresses to cirrhosis
- Other complications - osteoporosis, def in fat-soluble vitamins
Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis Tx and Prognosis
- No effective tx; many get liver transplant (if ascites, variceal bleeds, encephalopathy)
- May try endoscopic therapy to remove biliary blockage (balloon, drainage, stent)
- Surgical resection if endoscopic treatment fails
- Progression to death or need for liver transplant in 12-18 yrs
- Poss Complications - cholangiocarcinoma, cholelithiasis –> gall bladder neoplasia, colorectal neoplasia (b/c associated w/ UC)