am report 07/07/09 amy auerbach. - rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired...

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AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach

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Page 1: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

AM Report 07/07/09Amy Auerbach

Page 2: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

- Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy

- In a patient who previously had a normal liver or had well-compensated disease

Page 3: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

Toxins: Most common cause- Acetaminophen is the most common toxin; augmentin second most likely toxin

Viral: Most common viral cause are the hepatitis viruses (hepatitis B more commonly progresses to FHF than hepatitis A)

EBV, CMV, HSV, Varicella also potential etiologies Vascular: Portal vein thrombosis, Budd-Chiari

syndrome, veno-occlusive disease, ischemic hepatitis Metabolic: Wilson’s disease, acute fatty liver of

pregnancy, Reye’s syndrome Other: Autoimmune hepatitis, malignant infiltration of

the liver, sepsis

Page 4: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

Encephalopathy Cerebral edema Hypoglycemia Metabolic acidosis Sepsis Coagulopathy Multiorgan Failure

Page 5: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

Acetaminophen toxicity: NAC (NAC now used in non-acetaminophen related cases of fulminant hepatic failure as well)

Herpes: AcyclovirAutoimmune: SteroidsBudd-Chiari- Heparin/TIPSSupportive Care: Lactulose, stress ulcer prophylaxis, FFP if

actively bleeding, antibiotics for infections

Transplantation in all etiologies EXCEPT for infiltrating cancer (breast, melanoma, lymphoma)

Page 6: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who
Page 7: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

Perinatal transmission most common in high prevalence areas

Horizontal transmission (in early childhood) accounts for most cases in intermediate prevalence areas (minor breaks in skin or mucous membranes)

Unprotected sexual intercourse and IVDA in adults accounts for most of spread in low prevalence areas

Progression to chronic hepatitis B is much more common with perinatal transmission

Page 8: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who
Page 9: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

70% of patients with acute hepatitis B have subclinical or anicteric hepatitis

30% develop icteric hepatitis .5-1% develop fulminant hepatic failure:

believed to be secondary to massive immune-mediated lysis of infected hepatocytes

Page 10: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

Incubation period lasts 1-4 months May develop anorexia, jaundice, nausea,

RUQ discomfort Symptoms and jaundice typically resolve

after 1-3 months Lab testing reveals elevations in ALT and

AST up to 1000-2000 IU/L

Page 11: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

Traces of HBV often detectable in blood by PCR many years after clinical recovery

Persistent histologic abnormalities may be present many years after serologic recovery

Latent infection can maintain the T cell response for decades following clinical recovery

Page 12: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

HBsAg: Hepatitis B surface antigen- appears 1-10 weeks after an acute exposure to HBV

- Usually becomes undetectable after four to six months - Persistence of HBsAg for more than six months implies

chronic infection Anti-HBsAg- follows dissapearance of

HBsAg- Typically persists for life and confers long term immunity- May not be detectable until after a window period of several

weeks to months during

Page 13: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who
Page 14: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

IgM anti-HBc: IgM antibodies against hepatitis B core antigen: allow serologic diagnosis to be made during the “window period” and can help differentiate between acute and chronic infection

Anti-HBc: hepatitis B core antigen- intracellular antigen expressed in infected hepatocytes: can help differentiate between immunized patients and patients who have cleared infection

Page 15: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who
Page 16: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

HBeAg: Hepatitis B e antigen- secretory protein processed from the precore protein

- Considered to be a marker of HBV replication and infectivity

- HBeAg to anti-HBe seroconversion occurs early in patients with acute infection- prior to HBsAg to anti-HBs seroconversion

Page 17: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

Typical levels of alanine aminotransferase (ALT), HBV DNA, hepatitis B s and e antigens (HBsAg and HBeAg), and anti-HBc, anti-HBe, and anti-HBs antibodies are shown in acute self-limited HBV infection (Panel A) and in infections that become chronic (Panel B). The intensity of the responses, as a function of time after infection, is indicated schematically. HBV DNA may persist for many years after the resolution of acute self-limited infection.42

Page 18: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

May have stigmata of chronic liver disease: jaundice, splenomegaly, ascites, peripheral edema

Mild elevation in serum AST/ALT Progression of cirrhosis is possible Extrahepatic manifestations: polyarteritis

nodosa and glomerular disease

Page 19: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

High levels of HBV replication: presence of HBeAg and high levels of HBV DNA

No evidence of active liver disease Immune tolerance usually lasts 10-30 years-

in this time there is a very low rate of spontaneous HBeAg clearance

Immune clearance occurs during second and third decades in patients with perinatally acquired HBV infection

Page 20: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

HBeAg negative and anti-Hbe positive These patients can still have significant

histologic inflammation and/or fibrosis

Page 21: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

Cirrhosis HCC: surveillance for HCC recommended for

chronic HBV carriers Reactivation following seroconversion:

patients who receive immunosuppressive therapy (can also occur spontaneously)

Vaccinate against hepatitis A and caution re: alcohol, acetaminophen use

Page 22: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

Adult course is typically self-limiting In fulminant hepatic failure, lamivudine

most commonly used (L-nucleoside agent) Patients with compensated cirrhosis and

detectable level of HBV DNA are candidates to prevent progression

Threshold for treating HBeAg-positive chronic HBV infection is lower than for HBeAg negative infection

Page 23: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

Multiple reports of HBV reactivation in patients undergoing chemotherapy: risk is greatest upon withdrawal of treatment

Risk is greatest for patients who are: HBsAg positive, male gender, use of corticosteroids, use of rituximab

Other risk factors for reactivation:- HIV infection, superinfection with other hepatitis

viruses, interferon therapy, corticosteroids, immunosuppressive therapy

Page 24: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

Mutliple studies have suggested a benefit from prophylactic use of antiviral treatments in patients at risk for HBV reactivation

Anti-viral most commonly used is lamivudine

Started before chemotherapy and maintained at least six months after withdrawal of chemotherapy

Page 25: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

1) Acetaminophen toxicity is the most common cause of fulminant hepatic failure

2) Hepatitis B is the most common viral cause of fulminant hepatic failure

3) Anti-HepBc can help you tell the difference between an immunized patient and a patient who is “naturally” immune (positive in the patient who was exposed to infection)

4) IgM Anti-HBc is most useful during the “window period”

5) Prophylactic lamivudine can be used in setting of immunosuppression and chronic hepatitis B

Page 26: AM Report 07/07/09 Amy Auerbach. - Rapid development of severe acute liver injury with impaired synthetic function and encephalopathy - In a patient who

Uptodate.com Dienstag, Jules. Hepatitis B Virus Infection. NEJM Volm 359:1486-

1500 Lau GK et al. Early is superior to deferred preemptive lamivudine

therapy for hepatitis B patients undergoing chemotherapy. Gastroenterology, 2003; 125:1742-1749