Annals of Hepatology (Mar 2023)

P-38 CRYPTOGENIC CHRONIC HEPATITIS: LOOKING FOR AN ETIOLOGICAL DIAGNOSIS

  • Guilherme Cançado Grossi Lopes,
  • Aline Candolo Coelho Rocha,
  • Jorge Nardelli Mateus,
  • Patricia Zitelli Momoyo,
  • Daniel Mazo Ferraz De Campos,
  • Claudia Oliveira Pinto Marques De Souza,
  • Marlone Cunha-Silva,
  • Raquel Greca Dias,
  • Roberta Araújo Chaves,
  • Amanda Sacha Alustau Paulino Tolentino,
  • Claudia Couto Alves,
  • Roque Gabriel Rezende De Lima,
  • Alberto Farias Queiroz,
  • Flair José Carrilho,
  • Mário Guimarães Pessôa

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28
p. 100940

Abstract

Read online

Introduction and Objectives: Cryptogenic chronic hepatitis is an increasing cause of liver transplantation and affects 5-15% of patients with chronic liver diseases. This study aimed to investigate possible underlying causes of presumed cryptogenic liver disease referred to specialized liver centers by general practitioners in Brazil and to propose a new diagnostic algorithm including metabolic-dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD) definition and lysosomal acid lipase deficiency (LAL-D) investigation. Materials and Methods: A retrospective multicentric Brazilian cohort of patients with presumed chronic cryptogenic hepatitis was reanalyzed with respect to their clinical, laboratory and histological data using Czaja´s algorithm (2011). Results: 326 patients [mean age 60 (46-68) years, 42.9% males] were initially included, 35.7% with cirrhosis. Forty-five individuals were excluded due to an incomplete etiological investigation. Using Czaja´s algorithm, diagnosis of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease could be established in 60 patients (21.3%), alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency in 9 (3.2%), alcoholic liver disease in 7 (2.7%), autoimmune hepatitis in 5 (1.78%), hemochromatosis in 5 (1.78%), biliary-related hepatitis in 4 (1.4%), viral hepatitis in 4 (1.4%), Budd Chiari in 4 (1.4%), glycogenosis in 3 (1%), drug-induced liver injury in 2 (0.7%), and Wilson disease in 1 (0.35%). LAL-D was demonstrated in 3 individuals (1%). One hundred seventy-five patients remained with cryptogenic hepatitis (53.6%) (FIGURE A). During follow-up, 40 of those patients were submitted to liver transplantation and 19 (47.5%) were retrospectively diagnosed with non-alcoholic steatohepatitis after histopathological examination of the explanted liver. By including MAFLD in the first step of the new algorithm, 100 patients would have been diagnosed (34.9%), reducing the number of individuals without a diagnosis by 18.3% (FIGURE B). Conclusions: One-third of patients with initially presumed cryptogenic liver disease were diagnosed with MAFLD. Despite being a rare disease, LAL-D investigation should be considered for individuals with chronic liver disease of unknown etiology. An updated diagnostic algorithm is proposed for those individuals.