Reuters Health Information: Primary sclerosing cholangitis common in long-term IBD patients
Primary sclerosing cholangitis common in long-term IBD patients
Last Updated: 2016-07-14
By Will Boggs MD
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Primary sclerosing cholangitis
(PSC) affects as many as one in 12 patients with long-term
inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), researchers from Norway
report.
"We were surprised that so many patients had
cholangiographic signs of PSC, without having any actual
clinical or biochemical evidence of PSC," Dr. Aida Kapic Lunder,
of Akershus University Hospital and University of Oslo, told
Reuters Health by email.
PSC is a chronic inflammatory disease of the bile ducts
that can ultimately lead to liver failure and cancer. Liver
transplantation is the only potentially curative therapy.
Approximately 50% to 80% of PSC patients also have IBD, and
estimates of PSC prevalence range from 0.8% to 5.6% in
ulcerative colitis patients and from 0.4% to 6.4% in patients
with Crohn's disease.
Dr. Lunder's team used data from the Inflammatory Bowel
Disease South-East Norway (IBSEN) study to estimate the
frequency and distribution of magnetic resonance cholangiography
(MRC) lesions indicating PSC in 470 IBD patients two decades
after their initial diagnoses. Just over two-thirds of these
patients (n=322, 68.5%) underwent MRC at their 20-year
follow-up.
Twenty-four patients (7.4%) screened positive for PSC-like
bile duct lesions, including seven patients (2.2%) who had
previously been diagnosed with PSC. Two additional patients were
subsequently diagnosed with PSC, for an ultimate PSC prevalence
of 8.1% (26/322).
The prevalence of PSC-like bile duct lesions was higher in
Crohn's disease (9.0%) than in ulcerative colitis (6.8%) and
more common in women (9.2%) than in men (5.9%), but neither of
these differences achieved statistical significance, according
to the June 21 online report in Gastroenterology.
The presence of PSC was associated with extensive colitis
among patients with ulcerative colitis, but the extent of
colonic involvement was similar in Crohn's disease patients with
and without PSC.
PSC was significantly more common in patients with chronic,
continuous symptoms and in patients who had higher use of
steroids in the first five years after IBD diagnosis. MRC
findings were not associated with other IBD medications or
biological treatments.
Elevated liver enzymes were evident only among patients
with known PSC.
During a median follow-up time of 3.2 years, four patients
of 17 examined (23.5%) showed increasing dilatation of the
intrahepatic bile ducts. Only three patients (not those that
showed progression on MRC) experienced transient liver enzyme
elevations.
"PSC is more prevalent in the general IBD population than
earlier appreciated," Dr. Lunder concluded. "Clinical and
cholangiographic findings do not always go hand in hand."
"We do not advocate screening for PSC in patients with IBD,
but MRC should be considered as part of the follow-up," she
said. "Diagnosing subclinical PSC today probably does not
benefit the patients. This could, of course, change if effective
treatment became available."
Dr. Gideon Hirschfield, professor of autoimmune liver
disease at the University of Birmingham, UK, told Reuters Health
by email, "It is very helpful to understand the true prevalence
of PSC in patients with IBD, as it helps us frame the disease
much better."
"Further studies such as this are needed globally and over
time to fully understand the impact of increased diagnosis at
potentially an earlier preclinical/symptomatic stage," he said,
adding that such information could "guide us in how we design
new drugs and clinical trials."
The study had no commercial funding and the authors made no
disclosures.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2a1xJre
Gastroenterology 2016.
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