Quantitative changes of serum lipoprotein-X after cholestyramine administration in infants with cholestatic biliary tract and liver disease (original) (raw)
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The American journal of surgical pathology, 2016
The liver biopsy guides diagnostic investigation and therapy in infants with undiagnosed cholestasis. Histologic features in the liver may also have prognostic value in the patient with biliary atresia (BA). We assessed the relative value of histologic features in 227 liver needle biopsies in discriminating between BA and other cholestatic disorders in infants enrolled in a prospective Childhood Liver Disease Research Network (ChiLDReN) cohort study by correlating histology with clinical findings in infants with and without BA. In addition, we reviewed 316 liver biopsies from clinically proven BA cases and correlated histologic features with total serum bilirubin 6 months after hepatoportoenterostomy (the Kasai procedure, HPE) and transplant-free survival up to 6 years. Review pathologists were blinded to clinical information except age. Semiquantitative scoring of 26 discrete histologic features was based on consensus. Bile plugs in portal bile ducts/ductules, moderate to marked du...
Biliary atresia and other cholestatic childhood diseases: advances and future challenges
Journal of hepatology, 2016
Biliary Atresia and other cholestatic childhood diseases are rare conditions affecting the function and/or anatomy along the canalicular-bile duct continuum, characterised by onset of persistent cholestatic jaundice during the neonatal period. Biliary atresia (BA) is the most common among these, but still has an incidence of only 1 in 10-19,000 in Europe and North America. Other diseases such as the genetic conditions, Alagille syndrome (ALGS) and Progressive Familial Intrahepatic Cholestasis (PFIC), are less common. Choledochal malformations are amenable to surgical correction and require a high index of suspicion. The low incidence of such diseases hinder patient-based studies that include large cohorts, while the limited numbers of animal models of disease that recapitulate the spectrum of disease phenotypes hinders both basic research and the development of new treatments. Despite their individual rarity, collectively BA and other cholestatic childhood diseases are the commonest...
Biliary atresia: Where do we stand now?
World Journal of Hepatology, 2016
The pathway from clinical suspicion to establishing the diagnosis of biliary atresia in a child with jaundice is a daunting task. However, investigations available help to point towards the correct diagnosis in reasonable time frame. Imaging by Sonography has identified several parameters which can be of utility in the diagnostic work up. Comparison of Sonography with imaging by Nuclear medicine can bring out the significant differences and also help in appropriate imaging. The battery of Biochemical tests, available currently, enable better understanding of the line-up of investigations in a given child with neonatal cholestasis. Management protocols enable standardized care with optimal outcome. The place of surgical management in biliary atresia is undisputed, although Kasai procedure and primary liver transplantation have been pitted against each other. This article functions as a platform to bring forth the various dimensions of biliary atresia.
Pediatric Surgery International, 2007
Definitive exclusion of biliary atresia in the infant with cholestatic jaundice usually requires operative cholangiography. This approach suffers from the disadvantage that sick infants are subjected to a time-consuming and potentially negative surgical exploration. The purpose of this study was to determine if percutaneous cholecystocholangiography (PCC) prevents unnecessary laparotomy in infants whose cholestasis is caused by diseases other than biliary atresia. This study is a 10 year retrospective review of all infants with persistent direct hyperbilirubinemia and inconclusive biliary nuclear scans who underwent further evaluation for suspected biliary atresia. A gallbladder ultrasound (US) was obtained in all patients. When the gallbladder was visualized, further imaging by PCC was done under intravenous sedation; otherwise, the standard operative cholangiogram (OCG) was performed, with liver biopsy as indicated. The primary outcome was the diagnostic accuracy of PCC, especially with respect to preventing a laparotomy. There were 35 infants with suspected biliary atresia, with a mean age of 8 weeks (range 1-14 weeks). Nine infants whose gallbladder was visualized by ultrasound underwent PCC that definitively excluded biliary atresia. Of this group, the most frequent diagnosis (five patients) was total parenteral nutritionassociated cholestasis. The other 26 infants with absent or decompressed gallbladder had laparotomy and OCG, which identified biliary atresia in 16 patients (61%). Laparotomy was avoided in all 9 patients who underwent PCC, thus reducing the negative laparotomy rate by 47%. There were no complications associated with PCC. Several alternative techniques to operative cholangiogram have been described for the definitive exclusion of biliary atresia, but many of these have distinct drawbacks. Advances in interventional radiology techniques have permitted safe percutaneous contrast evaluation of the biliary tree. Identification of a normal gall bladder on sonogram is highly predictive of the absence of biliary atresia. Further confirmation can be accurately obtained by a combination of PCC and percutaneous liver biopsy.
Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology, 2011
Background & Aims-Pathologists participating in the NIH-sponsored Biliary Atresia (BA) Research Consortium (BARC) developed and then evaluated a standardized system for histological reporting of liver biopsies from infants with cholestasis. Methods-A set of 97 anonymous liver biopsy samples was sent to 10 pathologists at BARC centers. A semi-quantitative scoring system that had 16 histologic features was developed and then used by the pathologists, who had no knowledge of clinical history, imaging results, or laboratory data. Inter-observer agreement was evaluated statistically. Agreement on scoring of each feature and on the pathologists' diagnosis, compared with the final clinical diagnosis, were evaluated using weighted kappa statistics. Results-There was moderate to substantial inter-observer agreement in identification of bile plugs in ducts, giant-cell transformation, extramedullary hematopoiesis, and bile duct proliferation. The pathologists' diagnosis of obstruction in clinically proven cases of BA ranged from 79% to 98%, with a positive predictive value (PPV) of 90.7%. Histological features that best predicted BA, based on logistic regression, included bile duct proliferation, portal fibrosis, and absence of sinusoidal fibrosis (each P<0.0001). Conclusion-The BARC histological assessment system identified features of liver biopsies from cholestatic infants, with good inter-observer agreement, that might be used in diagnosis and determination of prognosis. The system diagnosed BA with a high level of sensitivity and identified infants with biliary obstruction with reasonable inter-observer agreement. However, distinguishing between BA and disorders such as total parenteral nutrition-associated liver disease and alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency is not possible without adequate clinical information.
An Unusual Cause of Cholestasis in an Infant: Biliary Atresia Type IIB
Indian Journal of Radiology and Imaging
Biliary atresia (BA) is a progressive destructive cholangiopathy of unknown etiology that presents in early infancy. It has a worldwide frequency of 1:8,000–1:15,000 and is common in Asia than in the west. Based on the level at which the lumen of the extrahepatic duct is obliterated, BA is classified into three types. Type III is the commonest (∼85%) type and has the most proximal level of obstruction in the porta hepatis, while type II in which the atresia is at the level of the common hepatic duct, is the least common (∼2.5%) and has been rarely reported. Here, we report the imaging features of an infant with type IIB biliary atresia.
E-ISSN: 2308-6483/13 © 2013 Synergy Publishers Biliary Atresia: A Challenging Diagnosis
Biliary atresia (BA) constitutes about one third of all neonatal cholestasis (NC) and the most common indication (up to 50%) of liver transplantation (LTx) in children. Despite extensive studies, its etiopathogenesis has not been clearly revealed. Treatment is primarily surgical based on reinstitution of bile flow by Kasai portoenterostomy, the success of which is largely dependent on the early diagnosis before 60 days of age. If portoenterostomy is not successful or not performed, LTx is the only life-saving alternative. Accurate diagnosis of BA, particularly distinguishing it from other causes of liver injury in the neonatal period, is challenging as there is a high degree of overlap in clinical, biochemical, imaging, and histological characteristics. There is no single preoperative investigation that enables the diagnosis of BA to be made with certainty. Liver biochemistry assessment, biliary radionuclide excretion scanning, magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP), endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP), percutaneous needle liver biopsy, and laparoscopy can all be helpful, but their results are not individually diagnostic. The current review presents an overview of BA with emphasis on the recent diagnostic modalities.
Infants With Cholestasis: Diagnosis, Management And Outcome
Marmara Medical Journal, 2012
Objective: Infants with cholestatic jaundice were evaluated retrospectively in terms of etiologies, diagnostic methods, laboratory findings, treatment procedures and long-term prognosis. Patients and Methods: The study consisted of 70 children (52.8% male, 47.1% female) with cholestasis ranging in age from 15 days to 8 months (mean age, 60±26 days). Patients were divided into three groups according to the diagnosis: (i) patients with extrahepatic biliary atresia, (ii) patients with intrahepatic biliary hypoplasia, and (iii) patients with hepatocellular disease. Their clinical parameters were evaluated. Results: In the group with extrahepatic biliary atresia the onset of jaundice was significantly earlier and the presence of acholic stool and total bilirubin levels were remarkably higher than in the groups with intrahepatic biliary hypoplasia or hepatocellular disease. Serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT) and alkaline phosphotase (ALP) levels were found to be significantly higher in the groups with extrahepatic biliary atresia and intrahepatic biliary hypoplasia than the group with hepatocellular disease (p<0.001 and p<0.01, respectively). The contribution of technetium-99m (99mTc) scintigraphy to the diagnosis was significantly higher in the group with extrahepatic biliary atresia than the groups with intrahepatic biliary hypoplasia and hepatocellular disease (p<0.002). Conclusion: It was found that cholestasis, acholic stool and elevated GGT are better markers for extrahepatic biliary atresia than for intrahepatic biliary hypoplasia or hepatocellular disease in infants. The contribution of scintigraphy to the diagnosis was found to be higher in the group with extrahepatic biliary atresia than in the other groups.