Heliyon (Jul 2024)
Effectiveness of oral methylprednisolone as adjuvant therapy for clinical improvement, biochemical markers, and inflammation in infants with cholestasis
Abstract
Aims: This study analyzed the effectiveness of methylprednisolone in improving jaundice, bilirubin levels, liver function tests, and inflammatory biomarkers in infants with cholestasis. Methods: The randomized, actively controlled, parallel‐group trial (ISRCTN45080388 registry) was conducted from November 2022 to May 2023 in Dr. Soetomo General Academic Hospital, Surabaya, Indonesia, on infants with cholestasis. The ethics committee of Dr. Soetomo General Academic Hospital, Surabaya approved the study protocol. Infants 14 days to 3 months old, with cholestasis followed by acholic stool, dark urine, and hepatomegaly were included in the trial. Participants were randomly assigned to methylprednisolone 2 mg/kg/day twice daily or to placebo twice daily for two weeks. Ursodeoxycholic acid (10 mg/kg) was administered to all patients thrice daily. Clinical examination and laboratory measurements (direct and total bilirubin, Aspartate aminotransferase (AST), Alanine transaminase (ALT), Gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT), and inflammatory biomarker) were performed at baseline and after 2‐week treatment. Measurement of inflammatory biomarkers (IL-2, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10, IFN-γ, TGF-β, and ANCA) was performed using enzyme-linked immunoassays. Data distribution was checked for normality. Analysis was carried out using SPSS ver. 21 with p significant <0.05. Results: In total, 40 participants were randomized to methylprednisolone (n = 20; mean age 8.39 ± 3.11 weeks) and placebo (n = 18; 2 drop out; mean age 8.98 ± 2.80 weeks) groups. At baseline, the methylprednisolone treatment and placebo groups significantly differed in gender (p = 0.02) but not in clinical, laboratory examination, or inflammatory biomarker levels. The methylprednisolone group had direct bilirubin 8.36 ± 4.84 mg/dL; total bilirubin 10.40 (2.70–33.25) mg/dL; AST 187.05 (42.00–911.00) U/L; ALT 170.43 ± 134.43 U/L; IL-2 171.29 (73.70–378.57) ng/L; IL-4 119.57 ± 59.69 ng/L; IL-6 71.74 ± 29.83 ng/L; IL-10 138.15 ± 70.62 ng/L; IFN-γ 42.54 ± 12.17 ng/L; TGF-β 316.58 (163.68–606.16) ng/L; ANCA 1.70 (0.66–3.25) ng/L. After two weeks of treatment, direct bilirubin, total bilirubin, AST, IL-10, and IFN-γ levels were significantly lower in the methylprednisolone group (p < 0.05) than those in the placebo group. No serious adverse events were reported. Conclusion: Methylprednisolone was efficacious in reducing 2‐week bilirubin levels. These results support the hypothesis that the immunological process is involved in cholestasis. Further studies with larger sample sizes are needed to confirm the bile duct anti-inflammatory effect of methylprednisolone in cholestasis as an opportunity for new therapies to prevent the immunopathological process of cholestasis to biliary atresia.