| 9. Cholestasis
/ J. Heathcote |
page
514 |
Cholestasis
simply means failure of flow of bile. The cause of this failure can arise
anywhere in the biliary system, from the liver cell down to the ampulla of
Vater. For clinical purposes it is easiest to think of cholestasis as
being either intra- or extrahepatic (Table
11).
TABLE 11. Major
causes of cholestasis
|
| Intrahepatic |
Common
Viral hepatitis
Drugs
Alcoholic hepatitis ± cirrhosis |
Less common
Primary biliary cirrhosis
Chronic hepatitis ± cirrhosis
Metastatic carcinoma
Cholestasis of pregnancy
Sepsis, TPN, etc. |
| Extrahepatic |
Common
Common bile duct stone(s)
Pancreatic/periampullary cancer |
Less common
Benign biliary stricture
Sclerosing cholangitis
Bile duct carcinoma
Benign pancreatic disease
Extrinsic duct compression |
|
| 9.1 Intrahepatic
Cholestasis |
page
514 |
Drug toxicity is the
commonest cause of cholestasis occurring at the cellular level. The injury
may be predictable, as with estrogens (for example), or unpredictable, as
with most idiopathic drug reactions. (However, as more intracellular
mechanisms become understood - e.g., the polymorphic nature of
drug-metabolizing enzymes - fewer reactions will be found to be
"unpredictable.") Histologically and clinically, cholestatic
drug reactions can be considered as "bland" or
"inflammatory." Systemic sepsis is often associated with
cholestasis. Endotoxins have been shown to affect both intracellular and
canalicular function. If sepsis occurs on a background of cirrhosis, the
cholestasis is much more profound.
Most acute and chronic liver diseases exert a
cholestatic effect via interruption of intracellular transport mechanisms
or damage to the small interlobular bile ducts. Damage to small bile ducts
is not at all unusual in acute and chronic hepatitis, particularly with
hepatitis C. Cholestasis is also a common feature of relapsing hepatitis
A, but does not carry any particular significance.
Several chronic liver diseases specifically target the
intrahepatic and sometimes the extrahepatic bile ducts. The diseases of
the liver that are associated with paucity of bile ducts are numerous.
Primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) and primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC)
are the best-known examples; other diseases that destroy bile ducts are
chronic drug reactions, chronic rejection, graft-versus-host disease and
chronic septic cholangitis, to name but a few.
In children, intrahepatic bile duct paucity may be
syndromatic (Alagille's) or nonsyndromatic (e.g., postviral, PSC). PSC is
commonly misdiagnosed as autoimmune hepatitis in children, as overt
cholestasis may be absent. Cystic fibrosis may give rise to focal biliary
cirrhosis as a result of inspissated bile in the ducts.
Many infiltrations may cause a biochemical cholestatic
pattern of liver disease, generally anicteric - e.g., sarcoidosis,
lymphomas, amyloid and granulomas of any etiology.There is a very rare
condition called "benign recurrent cholestasis" whose mechanism
is not understood at all. Several rare congenital conditions, often
associated with secretion of abnormal bile acids, result in severe chronic
cholestasis in infants. In children, total parenteral nutrition is a
well-recognized cause of cholestasis that is thought to be due to the
amino acid content interrupting bile acid uptake by the liver.
| 9.2 Extrahepatic
Cholestasis |
page
516 |
Diseases of the large bile
ducts are generally due to stones, strictures or tumors. The AIDS epidemic
has brought its own forms of cholestatic problems: fungal, protozoal and
viral cholangitis. Malignant tumors causing biliary obstruction now
include Kaposi's sarcoma, lymphoma, and the more common pancreatic and
bile duct carcinomas.
| 9.3 Primary
Biliary Cirrhosis (PBC) |
page
516 |
9.3.1 DIAGNOSIS
The more accurate term
for this disease is chronic nonsuppurative granulomatous cholangitis. It
predominantly affects women in middle age and is frequently associated
with autoimmune phenomena outside the liver (renal tubular acidosis,
vitiligo, thyroiditis, sicca syndrome, CREST syndrome, rheumatoid
arthritis and, less often, glomerulonephritis and vasculitis). It is
therefore presumed that PBC is also an autoimmune disease, although the
inciting antigen has not been identified.
PBC is rarely diagnosed at the first visit, because
one-third or more of patients are asymptomatic. The biochemical pattern
seen in PBC is typically cholestatic: elevated alkaline phosphatase, GGT
and 5«NT, with modest elevations of the aminotransferases. An elevated
bilirubin is associated with progressive, symptomatic disease,
indicating a poor prognosis. The most common symptom of this illness is
fatigue, very hard to define yet very distressing to the patient. Other
symptoms include pruritus, xanthelasma and, later in the course of the
disease, ascites, jaundice and encephalopathy. Portal hypertension
occurs early in this disease, as it is presinusoidal in nature; thus,
variceal hemorrhage may be a presenting symptom. Many patients with PBC
present with nonhepatic associations first. Raynaud's osteoporosis,
sicca syndrome and rheumatoid arthritis are the most common. Some
patients with PBC have been misdiagnosed as having the chronic fatigue
syndrome.
The diagnostic hallmarks for PBC include a
cholestatic serum biochemistry as described above, elevated serum
cholesterol, elevated serum IgM and a positive mitochondrial antibody
test. If all these features are present, a diagnostic liver biopsy is
not essential. The biopsy is subject to great sampling error and all
four "stages" may be seen in one specimen (Table
12).
TABLE 12. Diagnostic
features of primary biliary cirrhosis
|
Elevated serum alkaline
phosphatase
Elevated serum cholesterol
Antimitochondrial antibody positive
Typical liver histology
Normal ERCP |
|
9.3.2 MANAGEMENT
The management of PBC
includes symptomatic, preventive and specific measures.
There is little one can do for the fatigue, although
a sympathetic and understanding ear helps. Pruritus can generally be
controlled by using the anion exchange resin, cholestyramine. There are,
however, many who suffer gastrointestinal side effects from this drug,
so rifampin 150 mg b.i.d. or t.i.d. can be tried instead. Ultraviolet
light also helps, so that pruritus is less in the summer. A trip down
south always helps in the winter!
For the most part, the complications of long-term
cholestasis can be prevented, except for the osteoporosis. Once the
serum bilirubin is elevated, steatorrhea may occur with subsequent
malabsorption of fat-soluble vitamins. Vitamin A and D supplements are
available in water-soluble form, and vitamin K is best given
parenterally. The fat intake should not be reduced. Although this may
reduce the steatorrhea, it will also result in massive weight loss and
will not affect the serum cholesterol. Despite the hypercholesterolemia,
there is no increase in incidence of ischemic heart disease in PBC. A
low-cholesterol diet will not affect the high serum cholesterol as the
elevation is due to failure of biliary excretion. So far nothing has
been found to help the osteoporosis, which may cause wedging of the
vertebrae, although calcium supplementation of the diet is always
recommended in addition to vitamin D supplements.
Many specific therapies for PBC have been tried, none
with resounding success. Some are definitely contraindicated - notably
prednisone, because it promotes osteoporosis. Recently, treatment with
ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) has been studied. It has very few side
effects and causes a dramatic fall in all the biochemical markers for
this disease, and recently has been shown to improve survival in PBC
patients. Untreated, the mean survival of symptomatic PBC is 12 years.
Treatment with UDCA in a dose of 13-15 mg/kg/day results in a 31%
increase in survival after four years of therapy. The survival of those
with asymptomatic disease is much longer. The ultimate treatment is
liver transplantation; PBC patients do very well, with a 92% one-year
survival rate, though recurrence in the allograft has been reported.
| 9.4 Secondary
Biliary Cirrhosis |
page
518 |
Any disease that
permanently and progressively damages bile ducts and is not caused by
PBC may lead to secondary biliary cirrhosis, sometimes (although not
usually) in the absence of overt jaundice. The most obvious cause is
biliary atresia; other pediatric conditions include the various
hypoplastic duct syndromes, other biliary tree abnormalities -
Caroli's disease, choledochal cysts, sclerosing cholangitis - and
cystic fibrosis, which causes focal biliary cirrhosis. In adults the
commonest cause of secondary biliary cirrhosis is probably primary
sclerosing cholangitis (PSC), although iatrogenic bile duct strictures
also feature.
Primary sclerosing cholangitis is the most
common cause of secondary biliary cirrhosis in adults. It affects
about 10% of patients with ulcerative colitis or Crohn's colitis,
although 30% of patients with PSC have no background of inflammatory
bowel disease at the time of presentation. Patients are commonly
asymptomatic. Just as with PBC, PSC causes presinusoidal portal
hypertension, so variceal bleeding may present early - i.e., prior to
the onset of jaundice (Table
13). A cholestatic enzyme pattern in any patient with
liver problems should prompt the suspicion of PSC. The diagnosis is
made only by ERCP, never by liver biopsy. Because liver biopsy is not
helpful diagnostically it is performed only to see if the patient is
cirrhotic. If PSC is suspected prior to ERCP, then antibiotic coverage
should be given at the time of the procedure. Sepsis is the major
complication of this disease and needs to be avoided if possible, as
infection outside the liver precludes liver transplantation - the
treatment of choice for decompensated disease. Prior to
transplantation the only treatment available is symptomatic and/or
preventive, as described for PBC. As yet there have been no
therapeutic trials of any reasonable size performed in PSC and hence
there is no standard therapeutic intervention, although UDCA therapy
certainly leads to a fall in the serum markers of cholestasis and
theoretically it should improve the bile flow.
TABLE
13. Comparison of PBC and PSC
|
|
PBC |
PSC |
|
| Symptoms |
Often
none/pruritus |
Often
none |
| Biochemistry |
Elevated
ALP |
Elevated
ALP |
| Serum
bilirubin |
Slow rise |
Fluctuates |
| Non-organ
specific Ab |
AMA+ve |
AMA-ve |
| Liver
histology |
Helpful
in diagnosis/staging |
Helpful
in staging |
| ERCP |
Normal |
Abnormal |
|
| 9.5 Approach
to the Patient with Cholestasis |
page
519 |
9.5.1 DIAGNOSIS
The history in any
patient is always of utmost importance. A complete drug history
should be taken, including prescribed and over-the-counter drugs. A
past history of cholecystectomy should never be forgotten; common
bile duct stones are not unusual, even in the absence of symptoms
and/or dilated bile ducts on ultrasound. Manifestations of other
autoimmune disease should be sought. A history of chills and fever
would make one suspect extrahepatic (nonmalignant) biliary disease.
Examination should make special note of the
patient's temperature. Signs of chronic cholestasis include scratch
marks, shiny nails, increased skin pigmentation, xanthelasma,
xanthomatous neuropathy, and jaundice, which in its later stages
takes on a greenish hue. Hepatosplenomegaly is common in PBC, PSC
and biliary atresia, and with infiltrations like lymphoma.
9.5.2 LABORATORY
CONFIRMATION
The standard
biochemical tests are most helpful. Liver function tends to remain
normal for long periods in patients with anicteric cholestasis, but
the enzyme markers - alkaline phosphatase, GGT, 5«NT - are always
elevated. In those with prolonged jaundice, coagulation
abnormalities (correctable with vitamin K) are common. If the
results of these tests confirm the clinical suspicion, then the next
step is an ultrasound to look at the bile ducts. If there is
jaundice associated with fever or chills, there should be no delay
with the ultrasound examination of the abdomen.
9.5.3 FURTHER
MANAGEMENT
Further management
will depend entirely on whether the patient has dilated ducts. If
the ducts are dilated, the management will be interventional. If the
ducts are not dilated but there is still a suspicion that the
problem lies in the extrahepatic biliary system (common bile duct
stones following cholecystectomy, PSC), then an ERCP may still be
indicated. In most circumstances, an ERCP is a more helpful and
safer method of investigating extrahepatic biliary obstruction,
although if the local expertise is not available, a percutaneous
cholangiogram (PTC) may be necessary. The true value of magnetic
resonance cholangiography (MRC) is yet to be assessed.
If the history, physical and ultrasound all
support a diagnosis of intrahepatic cholestasis, then a liver biopsy
may be indicated to make a diagnosis, if this is not already obvious
at the bedside (e.g., sepsis, drug reactions). Cholestatic drug
reactions may take many months to clear after the drug has been
withdrawn. A clinical diagnosis of PBC needs to be confirmed by a
positive anti-mitochondrial antibody test +/- a liver biopsy.
There will always be patients in whom no
diagnosis can be made immediately. In the absence of jaundice, the
physician has time to observe. Granulomas of the liver are the most
likely cause of a "missed" diagnosis on biopsy.
Electromicroscopy may be helpful when a drug reaction is suspected. |