PBC and PSC - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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PBC and PSC

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Michael Nunez, MD September 20, 2004 Cholestatic Liver Disease medication induced TPN infections sepsis choledocholithiasis pancreatic malignancy pregnancy related ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PBC and PSC


1
PBC and PSC
  • Michael Nunez, MD
  • September 20, 2004

2
Cholestatic Liver Disease
  • medication induced
  • TPN
  • infections
  • sepsis
  • choledocholithiasis
  • pancreatic malignancy
  • pregnancy related
  • infiltrative liver diseases
  • primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC)
  • primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC)
  • secondary sclerosing cholangitis
  • graft vs. host disease

3
Autoimmune Liver/Biliary Diseases
  • PBC
  • PSC
  • autoimmune hepatitis
  • autoimmune cholangitis (AMA-negative PBC)

4
Primary Biliary Cirrhosis
  • misnomer actually a nonsuppurative autoimmune
    cholangitis
  • autoimmune disease of the liver
  • predominantly affects middle-aged women
  • results in destruction of interlobular bile ducts
  • causes cholestasis and, eventually, cirrhosis
  • no cure

5
PBC Epidemiology
  • worldwide distribution
  • 90 of patients are female (91 ratio)
  • median age at presentation is 50 years (range
    21-91)
  • prevalence of 20-400 patients per million
    population
  • up to 650 per million in US women
  • possible genetic association based on familial
    studies

6
PBC Pathogenesis
  • cause or trigger remains unknown (alloantigen?)
  • immune (T-cell) mediated attack that targets the
    epithelial cells of interlobular bile ducts
  • see B-cell elaboration of autoantibodies that may
    not be pathogenic
  • AMA is not pathogenic
  • intrahepatic bile duct destruction leads to
    cholestasis and fibrosis

7
Normal Liver Biopsy
8
PBC Pathology
damaged septal bile duct
damaged interlobular bile duct
9
PBC Pathology
bridging fibosis
missing interlobular bile duct (ductopenia)
10
PBC Clinical Presentation
findings frequency ()
fatigue 70
pruritus 55
asymptomatic 25
hyperpigmentation 25
hepatomegaly 25
splenomegaly 15
xanthelasma 10
jaundice 15
11
PBC Associated Diseases
disease frequency ()
Sjögren's / sicca 70-100
arthropathy 5-40
CREST / scleroderma 15-20
thyroiditis 15-20
autoimmune skin disease 10
RTA (proximal or distal) 50-60
gallstones 30
celiac sprue rare
12
PBC Diagnosis
  • abnormal liver function tests
  • alkaline phosphatase usually 3-4 times elevated
  • normal or minimally elevated transaminases (lt3x)
  • elevated serum cholesterol and IgM often seen
  • jaundice, hypoalbuminemia, and coagulopathy seen
    in later stages of the disease
  • serologic testing
  • AMA present in 90-95 (the best have sens98,
    spec96)
  • RF found in 70
  • ASMA in 66
  • anti-thyroid in 40
  • ANA in 35

13
PBC Diagnosis
  • liver biopsy
  • gold standard to make diagnosis and exclude other
    diagnoses
  • stage 1 - portal triad inflammation
  • stage 2 - parenchymal (interface) hepatitis
  • stage 3 - fibrosis
  • stage 4 cirrhosis
  • imaging studies
  • main utility in excluding biliary obstruction
  • can see increased hepatic echogenicity
  • can see lymphadenopathy in 25

14
PBC Natural History and Prognosis
  • AMA positive with normal LFTs and asymptomatic
  • 29 patients followed (18 years average)
  • 24 with PBC on biopsy (83)
  • 2 with normal biopsies
  • 24 developed abnormal LFTs at average of 5.6
    years
  • 22 developed symptomatic disease
  • no progression to cirrhosis or death from liver
    disease
  • asymptomatic PBC (AMA and biopsy) with abnormal
    LFTs
  • 40 develop symptoms in 5-7 years
  • once symptomatic, life expectancy falls (median
    survival 10 years but a large range)

15
PBC Natural History and Prognosis
  • symptomatic PBC patients
  • independent predictors of poor prognosis
  • advanced age
  • bilirubin level (gt10 portends 2 year avg.
    survival)
  • poor synthetic function
  • hepatomegaly
  • ascites or edema
  • variceal bleed
  • advanced biopsy stage
  • prognostic models have been developed and
    validatedhttp//www.mayoclinic.org/gi-rst/mayomo
    del2.html

16
PBC Treatment
  • traditional glucocorticoids
  • one controlled trial with benefits on
    biochemistry and histology
  • no change in mortality
  • colchicine
  • in 3 controlled trials, no prognostic or survival
    benefit
  • azathioprine
  • 248 patients without biochemical, histologic or
    survival benefit
  • cyclosporine
  • 349 patients without histologic or survival
    benefit
  • methotrexate
  • only one controlled trial with worse outcomes at
    6 years

17
PBC Treatment
  • ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA)
  • improves biochemistry, histology, and survival
  • 13-15 mg/kg/day divided TID
  • FDA approved for PBC
  • budesonide and UDCA
  • well studied only in UDCA non-responders no
    benefit in prognosis models
  • in naïve patients, improved biochemistry and
    histology (vs. UDCA alone), but no information on
    prognosis
  • AMA-negative PBC seems to behave and respond the
    same as PBC, but may overlap with autoimmune
    hepatitis.

18
PBC Management
  • osteopenia and osteoporosis
  • lose bone mass at twice rate of controls
  • risk of osteoporosis 8 times matched controls
  • 50 of post transplant PBC patients suffer
    fractures
  • treatment exercise, calcium and vitamin D
    (25,000-100,000 IU/week)
  • bisphosphonates need further study
  • fat soluble vitamins
  • monitor vitamins D, A and E
  • trial of vitamin K for prolonged prothrombin time
  • pruritus
  • cholestyramine 4-16 gm/day divided before and
    after breakfast
  • rifampin or oral naltrexone can be useful in
    non-responders
  • can require transplantation

19
PBC Transplantation
  • survival is better if transplanted before a
    life-threatening complication or patient is on
    life support
  • common indications
  • portal hypertensive bleeding
  • refractory ascites
  • encephalopathy
  • hepatorenal syndrome
  • disabling fatigue
  • disabling pruritus
  • severe muscle wasting
  • one-year survival rates 90 5-year gt80
  • post-transplant recurrence (by biopsy) in 30-50
    by 10 years but usually takes a benign course

20
Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis
  • most common type of sclerosing cholangitis in
    U.S.
  • autoimmune disease of the biliary tree
  • chronic inflammation and fibrosis of the bile
    ducts
  • may occur in association with other diseases
    (IBD, scleroderma, SLE, sprue)
  • but lacks a specific etiology (AIDS infections,
    parasites, operative injury, cystic fibrosis,
    RPC)
  • no cure

21
PSC Epidemiology
  • prevalence of 6-8 per 100,000
  • up to 44 are asymptomatic at diagnosis
  • 80 of patients have concomitant IBD and 90 of
    those have ulcerative colitis (some years before
    symptoms)
  • 3-6 of UC patients and 1 of Crohns patients
    have PSC
  • PSC and IBD progress independently
  • median age at diagnosis is 39 (neonates to
    octogenarians)
  • malefemale 1.51

22
PSC Pathogenesis
  • theory unknown trigger (toxin, infection,
    ischemia) in a genetically susceptible host
  • familial clustering reported
  • class II and III HLA associations
  • common autoantibodies (ANCA in 65-85)
  • humoral and cellular immune dysfunction
  • intra- and extra-hepatic bile duct inflammation
    and fibrosis
  • stricture formation and obliteration
  • intra- and extra-hepatic ducts usually involved
  • 5 predominantly extra-hepatic
  • 25 predominantly intra-hepatic
  • leads to cholestasis and cirrhosis

23
PSC Pathology
normal liver
onion skin fibrosis in PSC
24
PSC Pathology
fibrous obliteration
bile duct distortion
25
PSC Clinical Presentation
symptom frequency ()
jaundice 30-72
pruritus 28-69
abdominal pain 24-72
weight loss 29-79
fatigue 65-66
fever/cholangitis 13-45
asymptomatic 20-44
Course may be very variable with spontaneous
remission for prolonged periods.
26
PSC Diagnosis
  • symptoms
  • high index of suspicion in IBD patients
  • physical findings
  • hepatomegaly
  • splenomegaly
  • laboratory
  • alkaline phosphatase elevation (usually 3-fold or
    higher)
  • 6 have normal alkaline phosphatase
  • modest transaminase elevations (usually lt 3-fold)
  • bilirubin may be normal
  • small subset have marked eosinophilia
  • 65-85 are ANCA positive

27
PSC Diagnosis
  • liver biopsy
  • onion skin fibrosis is most common (50
    patients)
  • obliterative fibrous cholangitis is
    pathognomonic (10)
  • most findings can be confused with chronic
    hepatitis or auto-immune hepatitis
  • imaging studies
  • non-specific findings variably present
  • dilated intra-hepatic ducts may be seen
  • cholangiography
  • ERCP considered the gold standard
  • MRCP reported to have PPV of 90 and sens/spec of
    85 compared to ERCP
  • 75 will have strictures at the bifurcation

28
PSC Cholangiography
MRCP
ERCP
29
PSC Cholangiography
MRCP
ERCP
30
PSC Cholangiography
MRCP
ERCP
31
PSC Natural History and Prognosis
  • median survival or time to transplant is 12
    years, but very variable and less predictable
    than PBC
  • some predictors of poor prognosis (Mayo model)
  • advanced age
  • degree of bilirubin elevation
  • low albumin
  • high AST level
  • variceal bleeding
  • Child-Pugh classification is used by UNOS
    (transplant listing)
  • class A 90 7 year survival
  • class B 68 7 year survival
  • class C 25 7 year survival

32
PSC Natural History and Prognosis
  • malabsorption
  • steatorrhea
  • calcium malabsorption and osteoporosis
  • fat-soluble vitamin deficiencies
  • portal hypertension
  • bleeding
  • ascites
  • cholangiocarcinoma
  • median survival of 5 months
  • diagnosed in 3-20 of patients
  • found in 30-40 of PSC patients at autopsy
  • found in 23-33 of PSC patients at transplant
  • tumor markers unproven as screening tools

33
PSC Management
  • medical palliation
  • pruritus
  • cholestyramine
  • cholestipol
  • rifampin
  • bacterial cholangitis
  • antibiotics (gram neg bacilli,enterococci,
    bacteroides)
  • steatorrhea
  • fat-soluble vitamins
  • medium-chain triglycerides
  • interventional palliation
  • ERCP
  • dilation of dominant strictures
  • short-term stenting (7-14 days)
  • stone removal

34
PSC Transplantation
  • indications
  • complications of portal hypertension
  • hepatic dysfunction
  • disabling refractory symptoms
  • recurrent cholangitis
  • usually done with a Roux-en-Y biliary anasamosis
  • excellent patient and graft survival rates
  • if cholangiocarcinoma is found in native liver,
    survival drops to 30 at one year
  • PSC recurs in 15-20
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