1. Inflammasome-Driven Fatal Acute-on-Chronic Liver Failure Triggered by Mild COVID-19.
- Author
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Chen VC, Joseph CR, Chan WOY, Sia WR, Su Q, Sam XX, Tamilarasan H, Mah YY, Ng WL, Yeong J, Wang LF, Krishnamoorthy TL, Leow WQ, Ahn M, and Chow WC
- Subjects
- Humans, Fatal Outcome, Liver pathology, Liver virology, Hepatitis, Autoimmune pathology, Male, Middle Aged, Cytokines metabolism, Female, Macrophages immunology, COVID-19 complications, COVID-19 immunology, COVID-19 pathology, Acute-On-Chronic Liver Failure etiology, Acute-On-Chronic Liver Failure virology, Inflammasomes metabolism, SARS-CoV-2
- Abstract
Inflammasome is linked to many inflammatory diseases, including COVID-19 and autoimmune liver diseases. While severe COVID-19 was reported to exacerbate liver failure, we report a fatal acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) in a stable primary biliary cholangitis-autoimmune hepatitis overlap syndrome patient triggered by a mild COVID-19 infection. Postmortem liver biopsy showed sparse SARS-CoV-2-infected macrophages with extensive ASC (apoptosis-associated speck-like protein containing a CARD) speck-positive hepatocytes, correlating with elevated circulating ASC specks and inflammatory cytokines, and depleted blood monocyte subsets, indicating widespread liver inflammasome activation. This first report of a fatal inflammatory cascade in an autoimmune liver disease triggered by a mild remote viral infection hopes to elucidate a less-described pathophysiology of ACLF that could prompt consideration of new diagnostic and therapeutic options.
- Published
- 2024
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