1.Excerpt from the 2022 American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases clinical practice guideline: management of primary sclerosing cholangitis and cholangiocarcinoma.
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2023;31(1):35-41
What are the new contents of the guideline since 2010?A.Patients with primary and non-primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) are included in these guidelines for the diagnosis and management of cholangiocarcinoma.B.Define "related stricture" as any biliary or hepatic duct stricture accompanied by the signs or symptoms of obstructive cholestasis and/or bacterial cholangitis.C.Patients who have had an inconclusive report from MRI and cholangiopancreatography should be reexamined by high-quality MRI/cholangiopancreatography for diagnostic purposes. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography should be avoided for the diagnosis of PSC.D. Patients with PSC and unknown inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) should undergo diagnostic colonoscopic histological sampling, with follow-up examination every five years until IBD is detected.E. PSC patients with IBD should begin colon cancer monitoring at 15 years of age.F. Individual incidence rates should be interpreted with caution when using the new clinical risk tool for PSC for risk stratification.G. All patients with PSC should be considered for clinical trials; however, if ursodeoxycholic acid (13-23 mg/kg/day) is well tolerated and after 12 months of treatment, alkaline phosphatase (γ- Glutamyltransferase in children) and/or symptoms are significantly improved, it can be considered to continue to be used.H. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography with cholangiocytology brushing and fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis should be performed on all patients suspected of having hilar or distal cholangiocarcinoma.I.Patients with PSC and recurrent cholangitis are now included in the new unified network organ sharing policy for the end-stage liver disease model standard.J. Liver transplantation is recommended after neoadjuvant therapy for patients with unresectable hilar cholangiocarcinoma with diameter < 3 cm or combined with PSC and no intrahepatic (extrahepatic) metastases.
Child
;
Humans
;
Cholangitis, Sclerosing/diagnosis*
;
Constriction, Pathologic/complications*
;
In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence
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Cholangiocarcinoma/therapy*
;
Liver Diseases/complications*
;
Cholestasis
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Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/therapy*
;
Bile Ducts, Intrahepatic/pathology*
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Bile Duct Neoplasms/therapy*
2.Introduction to the recommendations from the European Association for the Study of the Liver clinical practice guidelines on the management of cystic liver disease.
Chen LIANG ; Su Jun ZHENG ; Zhong Ping DUAN
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2022;30(9):931-933
The diagnosis of cystic liver disease has made great progress with the advent of enhanced imaging techniques. At the same time, its management has gradually improved over the past few decades, providing the basis for the development of appropriate diagnostic and treatment guidelines. To this end, the European Association for the Study of the Liver has developed clinical guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of non-infectious cystic liver disease. This guideline put forward recommendations based on an in-depth review of the relevant literature for addressing clinical issues, including the diagnosis and treament of hepatic cysts, hepatic mucocystic tumors, biliary hamartomas, polycystic liver disease, Caroli disease or Caroli syndrome, biliary hamartomas, and peribiliary cyst.
Humans
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Liver Diseases/pathology*
;
Cysts/pathology*
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Caroli Disease/diagnosis*
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Liver Neoplasms/therapy*
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Hamartoma
3.Progress in the diagnosis of minimal hepatic encephalopathy.
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2022;30(1):110-112
Hepatic encephalopathy (HE) is a common serious complication of liver cirrhosis, with sudden onset, indicating a poor prognosis in patients with chronic liver disease. Minimal hepatic encephalopathy (MHE) is an early stage of HE with no apparent symptoms, but it shows abnormal results in neuropsychological and/or neurophysiological tests. MHE affects patients' quality of life, employability, driving ability, and has a high risk of developing overt hepatic encephalopathy (OHE). This article aims to explore various diagnostic methods, strengthen the routine work of clinicians in diagnosis and treatment, and develop an effective MHE screening protocol.
Hepatic Encephalopathy/diagnosis*
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Humans
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Liver Cirrhosis/diagnosis*
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Liver Diseases
;
Mass Screening
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Neuropsychological Tests
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Psychometrics
;
Quality of Life
4.Connective tissue diseases and the liver injury.
Wei Jia DUAN ; Shu Xiang LI ; Ting Ting LYU ; Sha CHEN ; Li Juan FENG ; Xiao Ming WANG ; Xiao Juan OU ; Ji Dong JIA
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2022;30(4):357-361
Connective tissue disease (CTD) are closely related to liver abnormality. CTD can affect the liver causing various degrees of liver injury, coexist with other liver diseases, especially autoimmune liver disease (ALD). Medications for CTD can also lead to liver injury or reactivate the hepatitis B virus. CTD patients can also be positive for ALD-related autoantibodies without corresponding manifestation; and vis versa. The diagnosis and differential diagnosis should be made on integrating clinical presentation, laboratory, imaging, and histological studies, not solely relying on autoantibody positivity.
Autoantibodies
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Autoimmune Diseases/diagnosis*
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Connective Tissue Diseases/diagnosis*
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Diagnosis, Differential
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Humans
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Liver
5.Guidelines on the management of cholestasis liver diseases (2021).
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2022;30(3):253-263
In 2015, the Chinese Society of Hepatology and Chinese Society of Gastroenterology issued the consensus on the diagnosis and management of cholestatic liver diseases. In the past years, more data have emerged from clinical practice. Herein, the Autoimmune Liver Disease Group of the Chinese Society of Hepatology organized an expert group to review the evidence and updated the recommendations to formulate the guidelines. There are 22 recommendations on clinical practice of cholestatic liver diseases. The guidelines aim to provide a working reference for the management of cholestatic liver diseases.
Autoimmune Diseases/diagnosis*
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Cholestasis/therapy*
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Consensus
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Gastroenterology
;
Humans
;
Liver Diseases/therapy*
6.Clinical characteristics of coronavirus disease 2019 patients complicated with liver injury.
Ming WEN ; Jin LU ; Yuanlin XIE
Journal of Central South University(Medical Sciences) 2020;45(5):555-559
OBJECTIVES:
To analyze the clinical characteristics in patients of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) complicated with liver injury, to explore the relationship between COVID-19 clinical classification and liver injury, and to elucidate whether COVID-19 complicated with hepatitis B virus can aggravate liver injury.
METHODS:
The abnormal liver function in 110 patients in the First Hospital of Changsha, who were confirmed COVID-19 and admitted to the designated hospital from January 17, 2020 to February 20, 2020, wereretrospectively analyzed. The detection indexes included serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), albumin (ALB), and total bilirubin (TBIL).
RESULTS:
A total of 49.1% of the COVID-19 patients had liver injury. There were significant difference in the ALT, AST, ALB (all <0.05), but there was no significant difference in the TBIL (>0.05) between the severe (critical) patients and the general (light) patients. There was also no significant difference in the liver function injury between the HBsAg-positive COVID-19 patients and HBsAg-negative COVID-19 patients (>0.05). Acute liver injury was not found to be a direct cause of death in the patients.
CONCLUSIONS
In the COVID-19 patients, the incidence of liver injury is high with the increase of ALT and AST and the decrease of ALB. Severe and critical patients have obvious liver injury, and those patients complicated with hepatitis B virus infection don't show aggravated liver injury.
Alanine Transaminase
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blood
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Aspartate Aminotransferases
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blood
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Betacoronavirus
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Bilirubin
;
blood
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Coronavirus Infections
;
diagnosis
;
Humans
;
Liver
;
physiopathology
;
virology
;
Liver Diseases
;
virology
;
Pandemics
;
Pneumonia, Viral
;
diagnosis
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Serum Albumin, Human
;
analysis
7.Infantile Hepatic Hemangioma: Avoiding Unnecessary Invasive Procedures
Lukas ERNST ; Enke GRABHORN ; Florian BRINKERT ; Konrad REINSHAGEN ; Ingo KÖNIGS ; Julian TRAH
Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology & Nutrition 2020;23(1):72-78
liver in infancy, can occur with acute postnatal liver and congestive heart failure. Nevertheless, its course is often benign, and many children can be diagnosed and treated without surgical intervention. The distinction from malignant diseases is not always easy and it not clear whether invasive procedures for diagnosis and therapy should be performed. Here we report our experiences in our Center for Pediatric Liver Disease and postulate that large studies are needed to avoid unnecessary invasive procedures for these patients in the future.]]>
Child
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Diagnosis
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Heart Failure
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Hemangioma
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Humans
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Infant
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Liver
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Liver Diseases
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Vascular Malformations
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Vascular Neoplasms
8.Performance Evaluation and Clinical Usefulness of α-fetoprotein Test Measured on Sysmex HISCL-5000
Jaewan JUNG ; Eun Suk KANG ; Hyung Doo PARK
Laboratory Medicine Online 2020;10(1):33-38
diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and monitoring its recurrence after treatment. In Korea, patients with a higher risk of HCC are tested every six months for AFP, as a screening process to detect HCC. We aimed to assess the analytical performance of the AFP test in the HISCL-5000 (Sysmex Corporation, Japan) instrument, which has been released recently.METHODS: HISCL-5000 AFP assay was evaluated for precision, linearity, and comparison, according to the CLSI (Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute) guidelines. For precision assessment, two control materials and one pooled human serum were measured twice a day for 20 days in duplicate. For linearity, five levels of material were produced covering the upper and lower limits of the measurable range and each of these was measured four times. Method comparison was conducted between HISCL-5000 and ADVIA Centaur XP (Siemens, Germany) with 500 samples consisting of 315 HCC, 57 benign liver disease, and 128 healthy subjects.RESULTS: Repeatability was between 2.44% and 9.19%, and within-laboratory precision was between 6.47% and 9.53%. Coefficient of determination (R²) was 0.9975, with the range of 1.2-1824.3 ng/mL. Correlation coefficient (r) was 0.9862 between HISCL-5000 and Centaur XP. Overall percent agreement was 95.2% and difference percentage between the two instruments was 7.0%. Reference interval from healthy subjects was 1.30-11.42 ng/mL.CONCLUSIONS: The HISCL-5000 showed adequate analytical performance for AFP measurement and is expected to be useful in clinical laboratories.]]>
Carcinoma, Hepatocellular
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Diagnosis
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Healthy Volunteers
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Humans
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Korea
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Liver Diseases
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Mass Screening
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Methods
;
Recurrence
9.Evaluation of Drug-Induced Liver Injury Developed During Hospitalization Using Electronic Health Record (EHR)-Based Algorithm
Yewon KANG ; Sae Hoon KIM ; So Young PARK ; Bo Young PARK ; Ji Hyang LEE ; Jin AN ; Ha Kyeong WON ; Woo Jung SONG ; Hyouk Soo KWON ; You Sook CHO ; Hee Bom MOON ; Ju Hyun SHIM ; Min Suk YANG ; Tae Bum KIM
Allergy, Asthma & Immunology Research 2020;12(3):430-442
PURPOSE: The incidence of drug-induced liver injury (DILI) has been increasing; however, few algorithms are available to identify DILI in electronic health records (EHRs). We aimed to identify and evaluate DILI with an appropriate screening algorithm.METHODS: We collected data from 3 university hospitals between June 2015 and May 2016 using our newly developed algorithm for identifying DILI. Among patients with alanine transferase (ALT) ≤ 120 IU/L and total bilirubin (TB) ≤ 2.4 mg/dL in blood test results within 48 hours of admission, those who either had 1) ALT > 120 IU/L and TB > 2.4 mg/dL or 2) ALT > 200 IU/L at least once during hospitalization were identified. After excluding patients with liver disease-related diagnosis at discharge, medical records were retrospectively reviewed to evaluate epidemiological characteristics of DILI.RESULTS: The total number of inpatients was 256,598, of whom 1,100 (0.43%) were selected by the algorithm as suspected DILI. Subsequently, 365 cases (0.14% of total inpatients, 95% confidence interval, 0.13–0.16) were identified as DILI, yielding a positive predictive value of 33.1%. Antibiotics (n = 214, 47.2%) were the major class of causative drug followed by chemotherapeutic agents (n = 87, 19.2%). The most common causative drug was piperacillin-tazobactam (n = 38, 8.4%); the incidence of DILI by individual agent was highest for methotrexate (19.4 cases/1,000 patients administered the drug). Common reasons for excluding suspected DILI cases were ischemic hepatitis and postoperative liver dysfunction.CONCLUSIONS: Using our EHR-based algorithm, we identified that approximately 0.14% of patients developed DILI during hospitalization. Further studies are needed to modify criteria for more accurate identification of DILI.
Alanine
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Anti-Bacterial Agents
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Bilirubin
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Diagnosis
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Drug-Induced Liver Injury
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Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions
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Electronic Health Records
;
Hematologic Tests
;
Hepatitis
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Hospitalization
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Hospitals, University
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Humans
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Incidence
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Inpatients
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Liver
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Liver Diseases
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Mass Screening
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Medical Records
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Methotrexate
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Pharmacoepidemiology
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Retrospective Studies
;
Transferases
10.New Perspectives in Pediatric Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease: Epidemiology, Genetics, Diagnosis, and Natural History
Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology & Nutrition 2019;22(6):501-510
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the most common cause of chronic liver disease in children. The global prevalence of pediatric NAFLD from general populations is 7.6%. In obese children, the prevalence is higher in Asia. NAFLD has a strong heritable component based on ethnic difference in the prevalence and clustering within families. Genetic polymorphisms of patatin-like phospholipase domain–containing protein 3 (PNPLA3), transmembrane 6 superfamily member 2, and glucokinase regulatory protein (GCKR) are associated with the risk of NAFLD in children. Variants of PNPLA3 and GCKR are more common in Asians. Alterations of the gut microbiome might contribute to the pathogenesis of NAFLD. High fructose intake increases the risk of NAFLD. Liver fibrosis is a poor prognostic factor for disease progression to cirrhosis. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy and magnetic resonance proton density fat fraction are more accurate for steatosis quantification than ultrasound. Noninvasive imaging methods to assess liver fibrosis, such as transient elastography, shear-wave elastography, and magnetic resonance elastography are useful in predicting advanced fibrosis, but they need further validation. Longitudinal follow-up studies into adulthood are needed to better understand the natural history of pediatric NAFLD.
Asia
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Asian Continental Ancestry Group
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Child
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Diagnosis
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Disease Progression
;
Elasticity Imaging Techniques
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Epidemiology
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Fibrosis
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Follow-Up Studies
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Fructose
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Gastrointestinal Microbiome
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Genetics
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Glucokinase
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Humans
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Liver Cirrhosis
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Liver Diseases
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Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
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Microbiota
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Natural History
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Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
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Phospholipases
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Polymorphism, Genetic
;
Prevalence
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Protons
;
Ultrasonography

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