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Autoimmune Hepatitis Thomas W. Faust, M.D.,M.B.E.

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Presentation on theme: "Autoimmune Hepatitis Thomas W. Faust, M.D.,M.B.E."— Presentation transcript:

1 Autoimmune Hepatitis Thomas W. Faust, M.D.,M.B.E.
Professor of Clinical Medicine The University of Pennsylvania

2 Autoimmune Hepatitis Overview
Chronic hepatocellular injury Etiology unclear Lymphocytic or lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate with interface hepatitis Lobular or panacinar necrosis Predominant aminotransferase elevation Autoantibodies and hypergammaglobulinemia Exclusion of other chronic diseases Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479

3 Autoimmune Hepatitis Overview
Exclusion of other chronic diseases Viral hepatitis (HBV and HCV) Alcoholic liver disease and NAFLD Drug-induced hepatotoxicity Wilson disease Hereditary hemochromatosis Alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency Primary biliary cirrhosis Primary sclerosing cholangitis

4 Autoimmune Hepatitis Epidemiology
Incidence: 1.9 cases per 100,000 persons per yr Prevalence: 16.9 cases per 100,000 persons per yr Females account for 70% of cases, 50%  40 years Cause of chronic liver disease: 11-23% AIH accounts for 2.6% and 5.9% of liver transplants in Europe and U.S. respectively Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479

5 Autoimmune Hepatitis Natural History
Severe disease (untreated) 40% die within 6 months of diagnosis 40% of survivors develop cirrhosis 54% of cirrhotics develop varices within 2 years of diagnosis of cirrhosis 20% of patients with varices will bleed

6 Autoimmune Hepatitis Poor Prognostic Factors Without Treatment
Liver chemistry tests AST > 10 X ULN or > 5 X ULN + gamma globulin > 2 X ULN Risk of cirrhosis and 90% mortality at 10 yr Bridging or multiacinar necrosis 82% of patients develop cirrhosis within 5 yr 45% mortality at 5 yr Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479 Manns et al. Hepatology 2006;43:S132

7 Autoimmune Hepatitis Genetics
Type 1 DRB1*0301, DRB1*0401, TNF*2A Type 2 DRB1*0701, HLA B14, HLA DR3, C4A-QO First degree relatives Autoantibodies Hypergammaglobulinemia Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479 Krawitt. N Engl J Med 2006;354:54 Manns et al. Hepatology 2006;43:S132

8 Autoimmune Hepatitis Pathogenesis
Genetic factors Antigen presentation/immunocyte activation DRB1 encodes for MHC II antigen binding grooves (antigen presentation to T cells) Triggering factors Infections (HAV, HBV, HCV, HSV, EBV, measles)? Medications (ABX, statins, NSAIDs etc.)? Toxins? Molecular mimicry? Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479 Krawitt. N Engl J Med 2006;354:54 Manns et al. Hepatology 2006;14:S132

9 Autoimmune Hepatitis Pathogenesis
Autoantigenic peptide processed by APC in context of MHC II Recognition of antigen-MHC II complex by uncommitted CD4 cells Cytokine release from TH1 and TH2 CD4 cells IL-12 and IL-2: proliferation of CD8 cells IL-4 and IL-10: proliferation of B cells Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479 Krawitt. N Engl J Med 2006;354:54

10 Autoimmune Hepatitis Pathogenesis
Antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity Antibodies directed against ASGPR Suppressor T cell defect Binding of NK cell to antigen-antibody complex followed by hepatocyte destruction Cell-mediated cytotoxicity IL-12 and IL-2 released Aberrant display of MHC class II CD8 T cell destruction of hepatocyte Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479 Krawitt. N Engl J Med 2006;354:54 Czaja. Am J Gastroenterol 2001;96:1224

11 Autoimmune Hepatitis International Autoimmune Hepatitis Group
Gender AP/AST, ALT ratio Serum globulins/IgG ANA, ASMA, LKM-1 AMA positive Viral serologies Drug history Alcohol intake Liver histology Other autoimmune diseases HLA DR3/DR4 Response to therapy Alverez et al. J Hepatol 1999;31:929

12 Autoimmune Hepatitis Simplified Criteria
Autoantibodies ANA, ASMA, LKM-1, SLA IgG Typically elevated in autoimmune hepatitis Histology Interface hepatitis, lymphocytic or lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate, rosettes Exclusion of viral hepatitis Hepatotropic viruses and others Hennes et al. Hepatology 2008;48:169

13 Autoimmune Hepatitis Type 1
Age: infants to elderly Female: 78% Autoantigen: asialoglycoprotein receptor? Autoantibodies: ANA, ASMA Others: pANCA, actin, ASGPR, SLA/LP HLA: A1-B8-DR3 or HLA DR4 serotypes Extrahepatic autoimmune disease: 15-40% -globulin elevation: marked Czaja et al. Am J Gastroenterol 1995;90:1206 Krawitt. N Engl J Med 2006;354:54

14 Autoimmune Hepatitis Type 1
HLA A1-B8-DR3 Young females Severe disease Relapse after steroids Treatment failure with steroids More likely to require OLT HLA DR4 Older females Milder disease More steroid responsive Higher frequency of extrahepatic autoimmune diseases Donaldson. Semin Liver Dis 2002;22:353 Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479

15 Autoimmune Hepatitis Type 2
Age: 2-14 years Female: 90% Autoantigen: CYP450 IID6 Autoantibodies: LKM-1 Others: LC-1, SLA/LP Extrahepatic autoimmune disease: 40% -globulin elevation: Mild Severity: more severe than type 1? Krawitt. N Engl J Med 2006;354:54 Czaja et al. Am J Gastroenterol 1995;90:1206

16 Autoimmune Hepatitis Type 3 (Variant Type 1) ?
Age: years Female: 90% Autoantigen: transfer ribonucleoprotein complex Autoantibodies: SLA/LP Others: actin, ASMA, ANA Extrahepatic autoimmune disease: 58% -globulin elevation: Moderate Reclassification: type 1 AIH Manns et al. Hepatology 2006;43:S132 Czaja et al. Am J Gastroenterol 1995;90:1206

17 Autoimmune Hepatitis Clinical Manifestations
Fatigue Fever Jaundice RUQ pain Myalgia/arthralgia Anorexia Hepatosplenomegaly Spider angiomata Cushingoid features Hirsuitism Acne Portal hypertension Ascites Varices Encephalopathy FHF HCC Asymptomatic Desmet et al. Hepatology 1994;19:1513

18 Autoimmune Hepatitis Complications of Cirrhosis
Netter’s Gastroenterology, 2nd ed., Elsevier Inc., 2010, all rights reserved

19 Autoimmune Hepatitis Cirrhosis to Hepatocellular Carcinoma
HCC Netter’s Gastroenterology, 2nd ed., Elsevier Inc., 2010, all rights reserved

20 Autoimmune Hepatitis Extrahepatic Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune thyroiditis Grave’s disease Connective tissue diseases Inflammatory bowel disease Celiac disease Adrenal insufficiency Autoimmune hematologic disorders Type 1 DM Sjogren’s syndrome Fibrosing alveolitis Vitiligo Vasculitis Nephritis Krawitt. N Engl J Med 2006;354:54 Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479

21 Autoimmune Hepatitis Liver Chemistry Tests
Aminotransferases Most commonly < 500 U/L Rarely over 1000 U/L Hyperbilirubinemia Severe acute decompensation End stage liver disease Alkaline phosphatase Usually < 2x ULN Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479

22 Autoimmune Hepatitis Serology
Type 1 ANA, ASMA, pANCA, actin, ASGPR Type 2 LKM-1, LC-1 Type 3 (variant type 1) ? SLA/LP Elevated gamma globulins and IgG Low IgA (type 2 AIH) Czaja et al. Am J Gastroenterol 1995;90:1206

23 Autoimmune Hepatitis Histology
Piecemeal necrosis (interface hepatitis) Panacinar inflammation or collapse Lymphoplasmacytic infiltrates Eosinophils Rosette formation Fibrosis or cirrhosis Absence of portal lymphoid aggregates and steatosis Krawitt. N Engl J Med. 2006;354:54

24 Autoimmune Hepatitis Histology
Lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate Interface hepatitis Portal inflammation and invasion of limiting plate

25 Autoimmune Hepatitis Histology
Prominent lobular infiltrate composed of mononuclear and plasma cells Lobular infiltrate

26 Autoimmune Hepatitis Histology
Prominent plasma cells appreciated in this specimen Plasma cells

27 Autoimmune Hepatitis Prognostic Indices
Blood tests AST level Gamma globulin level Histology Interface hepatitis Bridging or multilobular necrosis Cirrhosis Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479

28 Autoimmune Hepatitis Severe Disease
AST  10 x ULN AST  5 x ULN + GG  2 x ULN Bridging necrosis Multilobular collapse HLA B8, DR3 African American males Mortality 50% at 3 years 90% at 10 years Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479

29 Autoimmune Hepatitis Mild to Moderate Disease
AST < 10 x ULN GG < 2 x ULN Periportal hepatitis HLA DR 4 Complications 49% risk of cirrhosis at 15 years 10% 10-year mortality Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479

30 Autoimmune Hepatitis Histology and Prognosis
Interface hepatitis 17% risk of cirrhosis at 5 years Normal survival Bridging or multilobular necrosis 82% risk of cirrhosis at 5 years 45% 5-year mortality Cirrhosis 58% 5-year mortality Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479

31 Autoimmune Hepatitis Overall Goals of Treatment
Induce remission Prevent disease progression Minimize relapse of disease Improve survival Minimize medication side effects Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479 Krawitt. N Engl J Med 2006;354:54

32 Autoimmune Hepatitis Absolute Treatment Indications
Clinical Incapacitating symptoms Progression of disease Laboratory AST  10 x ULN AST  5 x ULN + GG  2 x ULN Histology Bridging necrosis Multilobular necrosis Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479 Krawitt. N Engl J Med 2006;354:54

33 Autoimmune Hepatitis Relative Treatment Indications
Clinical Mild symptoms Laboratory AST 3-9 x ULN AST  5 x ULN + GG < 2 x ULN Histology Interface hepatitis Active cirrhosis Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479 Krawitt. N Engl J Med 2006;354:54

34 Autoimmune Hepatitis No Treatment
Clinical Asymptomatic patient Intolerance to prednisone and azathioprine Laboratory AST < 3 x ULN Severe cytopenia Histology Portal hepatitis Inactive or decompensated cirrhosis Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479 Krawitt. N Engl J Med 2006;354:54

35 Autoimmune Hepatitis Immunosuppressive Therapy
Prednisone 30 mg/d x 1 week 20 mg/d x 1 week 15 mg/d x 2 weeks 10 mg/d until endpoint Azathioprine 50 mg/d until endpoint Prednisone alone 60 mg/d x 1 week 40 mg/d x 1 week 30 mg/d x 2 weeks 20 mg/d until endpoint Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479

36 Autoimmune Hepatitis Treatment Endpoints
Disease remission Relapse after treatment withdrawal Treatment failure Incomplete response Drug toxicity Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479 Krawitt. N Engl J Med 2006;354:54

37 Autoimmune Hepatitis Disease Remission
Disappearance of symptoms Normalization or near normalization of AST to < 2 x ULN GG and bilirubin: normal Minimal or no hepatic inflammation 65% and 80% of patients within 18 months and 3 yrs of initiation of Rx respectively 10 year survival: 90% Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479 Krawitt. N Engl J Med 2006;354:54

38 Autoimmune Hepatitis Relapse after Drug Withdrawal
Aminotransferases > 3 x ULN GG > 2g/dL Recurrent inflammation on liver biopsy Risk of relapse 50% at 6 months and 70% at 3 years Prednisone or prednisone + AZA Same regimen as for naïve patients Long-term low dose prednisone or AZA (2 mg/kg/d) for relapses (goal: AST  3x ULN) 47% of pts achieve sustained remission off medications after 10 years Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479 Krawitt. N Engl J Med 2006;354:54

39 Autoimmune Hepatitis Treatment Failure
Worsening symptoms (9% of patients) Increase in AST/bilirubin by 67% Progressive necroinflammatory activity Signs of liver failure Jaundice Ascites Encephalopathy High dose immunosuppressive therapy Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479

40 Autoimmune Hepatitis Treatment Failure
High dose immunosuppression Prednisone 60 mg daily Prednisone 30 mg + azathioprine 150 mg daily Above for at least 1 month/taper dose Clinical and biochemical improvement 70% of patients within 2 years Resolution of inflammatory activity 20% of patients Long-term therapy or OLT Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479

41 Autoimmune Hepatitis Incomplete Response
Improvement in clinical, biochemical, and histologic parameters Failure to satisfy remission criteria Remission unlikely if it cannot be obtained within 3 years of initiation of drug therapy Low dose prednisone or azathioprine Control symptoms AST  5 x ULN Czaja et al. Hepatology 2002;36:479

42 Autoimmune Hepatitis Drug Toxicity
Intolerable symptoms/obesity Osteoporosis and fractures Diabetes Cytopenia AZA-induced hepatotoxicity Reduction, withdrawal, or change of immunosuppressive medications

43 Autoimmune Hepatitis Alternative Medications
Mycophenolate Cyclosporine Tacrolimus Budesonide Methotrexate Cyclophosphamide

44 Autoimmune Hepatitis Liver Transplantation
End-stage liver disease Complications of portal hypertension Hepatocellular carcinoma Fulminant liver disease Acute liver injury Acute decompensation superimposed on chronic liver injury Results 5 yr pt and graft survival: 80-90% Recurrence: 15-40% Higher rates of acute and chronic rejection

45 Autoimmune Hepatitis Take Home Points
Chronic hepatocellular disease of unknown etiology Clinical presentation is variable Diagnosis based upon LFTs, serology, gamma globulins, and histology Immunosuppressive therapy is the mainstay of treatment Tailor therapy based upon treatment endpoints

46 Autoimmune Hepatitis Question 1
A previously healthy 40 yr. old woman presents with fatigue and dark urine for 2 weeks. There is no history of significant alcohol or drug use. Physical exam is remarkable for jaundice and tender hepatomegaly. Labs are notable for AST 1000 U/L, ALT 1500 U/L, and alkaline phosphatase of 350 U/L. The total bilirubin is 10 mg/dl and the INR is 1.3. ASMA is positive to 1:320 and IgG is twice normal. Liver ultrasound reveals hepatomegaly o/w normal. What findings would be found on liver biopsy? DDSEP 6, AGA Press, 2011.

47 Autoimmune Hepatitis Question 1
A. Perivenular neutrophil inflammation with ballooned hepatocytes and Mallory bodies B. Infiltration of portal tracts with lymphocytes and plasma cells, interface hepatitis, piecemeal necrosis along limiting plate C. Infiltration of portal tracts with destruction of interlobular bile ducts D. Periportal and lobular non-caseating granulomas E. Ground glass hepatocytes and Councilman bodies DDSEP 6, AGA Press, 2011.

48 Autoimmune Hepatitis Question 2
Which one of the following statements about prognostic factors and autoimmune hepatitis is true? A. Mild periportal hepatitis is associated with 90% mortality at 10 years without treatment. B. 60% of patients die within 6 months of diagnosis. C. AST ≥ 10 times ULN or ≥ 5 times ULN + gamma globulins ≥ 2 times ULN are associated with 90% mortality at 10 yrs without treatment D. Bridging necrosis is associated with a favorable prognosis E. Young pts are less likely to go to transplant when compared to older patients

49 Autoimmune Hepatitis Question 3
A 12 yr. old female presents with malaise, fatigue, and myalgias. She mentions that her stools are lighter color than normal. Physical examination is remarkable for jaundice and a liver edge 2 finger breaths below the right costal margin. Her laboratory evaluation reveals a total bilirubin of 13.1 mg/dl, AST of 2300 U/L, an ALT of 3124 U/L, and an INR of 1.4. Type 2 autoimmune hepatitis is suspected. Which laboratory test is appropriate?

50 Autoimmune Hepatitis Question 3
A. Antinuclear (ANA) and antismooth muscle antibodies (ASMA) B. Antimitochondrial antibodies (AMA) and total lipid profile C. Antibodies to soluble liver antigen (SLA) D. Serum IgM E. Anti liver-kidney-microsomal (LKM-1) antibodies

51 Autoimmune Hepatitis Question 4
Which one of the following is an absolute indication for treatment with steroids and azathioprine? A. Cirrhosis with minimal activity B. Bridging and multilobular necrosis C. AST < 3 times ULN D. Periportal hepatitis E. Mild symptoms

52 Autoimmune Hepatitis Question 5
A 28 yr. old female presents for evaluation of abnormal liver-associated enzymes. Overall, she feels well and the physical exam is unremarkable. Labs reveal AST of 2124 U/L, ALT of 2256 U/L, ANA and ASMA are positive. Liver biopsy shows severe panlobular necrosis. Which one of the following is the appropriate next step?

53 Autoimmune Hepatitis Question 5
A. Begin azathioprine as monotherapy of 50 mg daily until remission achieved. B. Begin cyclosporine 100 mg twice daily in combination with mycophenolate 500 mg twice daily. C. Refer patient for liver transplant evaluation D. Begin prednisone 30 mg daily in combination with azathioprine 50 mg daily E. Repeat liver associated enzymes in 3-4 weeks prior to making treatment decisions

54 Autoimmune Hepatitis Question 6
Which treatment is most appropriate for patients that have worsening liver enzymes despite standard treatment with steroids and azathioprine? A. Increase prednisone to 60 mg daily or to 30 mg daily in combination with azathioprine 150 mg daily for at least 1 month. B. Refer immediately for liver transplant evaluation C. Add tacrolimus 2 mg twice daily to prednisone 10 mg daily and azathioprine 50 mg daily. D. Stop prednisone and start azathioprine 50 mg daily, mycophenolate 500 mg daily, and tacrolimus 1 mg twice daily E. Continue steroids and azathioprine at same dose and repeat liver enzymes in 6 weeks.

55 Autoimmune Hepatitis Answers to Questions
1. B 2. C 3. E 4. B 5. D 6. A


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