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The natural history of primary sclerosing cholangitis in 781 children: A multicenter, international collaboration

Authors :
Jason Yap
Madeleine Gottrand
Amanda Ricciuto
Raghu Varier
Niamh O'Cathain
Raffaele Iorio
Mounif El-Youssef
Annemarie Broderick
Wael El-Matary
Atushi Tanaka
Alexandra Papadopoulou
Marcus Auth
Achiya Z. Amir
Lawrence J. Saubermann
Pamela L. Valentino
Bernadette Vitola
Reham Abdou
Sylvia Doan
Mark Deneau
M. Kyle Jensen
Kaija-Leena Kolho
Mansi Amin
Fateh Bazerbachi
Oren Ledder
Parvathi Mohan
Veena Venkat
Kyung Mo Kim
Jillian M. Cotter
Nitika A. Gupta
Anastasia Konidari
Cara L. Mack
Miriam B. Vos
Federica Ferrari
Pushpa Sathya
Marek Woynarowski
Katryn N. Furuya
Vratislav Smolka
Eyal Shteyer
Frédéric Gottrand
Matjaz Homan
Binita M. Kamath
Bart G. P. Koot
Khaled Alqoaer
Albert Chan
Mercedes Martinez
Tamir Miloh
AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism
ARD - Amsterdam Reproduction and Development
Paediatric Gastroenterology
Deneau, Mark R.
El-Matary, Wael
Valentino, Pamela L.
Abdou, Reham
Alqoaer, Khaled
Amin, Mansi
Amir, Achiya Z.
Auth, Marcu
Bazerbachi, Fateh
Broderick, Annemarie
Chan, Albert
Cotter, Jillian
Doan, Sylvia
El-Youssef, Mounif
Ferrari, Federica
Furuya, Katryn N.
Gottrand, Madeleine
Gottrand, Frederic
Gupta, Nitika
Homan, Matjaz
Kamath, Binita M.
Kim, Kyung Mo
Kolho, Kaija-Leena
Konidari, Anastasia
Koot, Bart
Iorio, Raffaele
Ledder, Oren
Mack, Cara
Martinez, Mercede
Miloh, Tamir
Mohan, Parvathi
O'Cathain, Niamh
Papadopoulou, Alexandra
Ricciuto, Amanda
Saubermann, Lawrence
Sathya, Pushpa
Shteyer, Eyal
Smolka, Vratislav
Tanaka, Atushi
Varier, Raghu
Venkat, Veena
Vitola, Bernadette
Vos, Miriam B.
Woynarowski, Marek
Yap, Jason
Jensen, M. Kyle
Source :
Hepatology (Baltimore, Md.), 66(2), 518-527. John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

There are limited data on the natural history of primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) in children. We aimed to describe the disease characteristics and long-term outcomes of pediatric PSC. We retrospectively collected all pediatric PSC cases from 36 participating institutions and conducted a survival analysis from the date of PSC diagnosis to dates of diagnosis of portal hypertensive or biliary complications, cholangiocarcinoma, liver transplantation, or death. We analyzed patients grouped by disease phenotype and laboratory studies at diagnosis to identify objective predictors of long-term outcome. We identified 781 patients, median age 12 years, with 4,277 person-years of follow-up; 33% with autoimmune hepatitis, 76% with inflammatory bowel disease, and 13% with small duct PSC. Portal hypertensive and biliary complications developed in 38% and 25%, respectively, after 10 years of disease. Once these complications developed, median survival with native liver was 2.8 and 3.5 years, respectively. Cholangiocarcinoma occurred in 1%. Overall event-free survival was 70% at 5 years and 53% at 10 years. Patient groups with the most elevated total bilirubin, gamma-glutamyltransferase, and aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio index at diagnosis had the worst outcomes. In multivariate analysis PSC–inflammatory bowel disease and small duct phenotypes were associated with favorable prognosis (hazard ratios 0.6, 95% confidence interval 0.5-0.9, and 0.7, 95% confidence interval 0.5-0.96, respectively). Age, gender, and autoimmune hepatitis overlap did not impact long-term outcome. Conclusion: PSC has a chronic, progressive course in children, and nearly half of patients develop an adverse liver outcome after 10 years of disease; elevations in bilirubin, gamma-glutamyltransferase, and aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio index at diagnosis can identify patients at highest risk; small duct PSC and PSC–inflammatory bowel disease are more favorable disease phenotypes. (Hepatology 2017;66:518–527).

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02709139
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Hepatology (Baltimore, Md.), 66(2), 518-527. John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3f7508d0a7032f32bd9f5a5e35c2b9e1