Objective The decision regarding whether to perform a liver biopsy in patients with cirrhosis and clinically suspected autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) remains a challenge. This study aimed to assess the utility and complications of percutaneous liver biopsy in cirrhosis for differentiating AIH from other liver conditions. Methods A clinicopathological database of patients undergoing percutaneous liver biopsies for suspected AIH (unexplained hepatitis with elevated 3-globulin and autoantibody seropositivity) was reviewed to identify patients presenting with cirrhosis. Biopsy slides were reviewed by an experienced hepatopathologist who was blinded to clinical data. Results In 207 patients who underwent liver biopsy for suspected AIH, 59 patients (mean age: 59.0±12.0 years, 83.1% female) had clinically diagnosis of cirrhosis. Mean Child-Turcotte-Pugh score was 6.6±1.6, and 44% of patients had a Child-Turcotte-Pugh score≥7. According to the revised International AIH Group (IAIHG) criteria, histology assessment combined with clinical information facilitated a diagnosis of AIH or overlap syndrome of AIH and primary biliary cholangitis (PBC) in 81.4% of cases. Liver biopsy identified other aetiologies, including PBC (n=2), non-Alcoholic steatohepatitis (n=6) and cryptogenic cirrhosis (n=3). A reliable diagnosis of AIH could be made using histological category of the simplified criteria in 69.2% and 81.8% of cases using IAIHG scores before biopsy of <10 and 10-15, respectively. Three patients with cirrhosis (5.1%) experienced bleeding following biopsy, but none of 148 patients with non-cirrhosis had bleeding complication (p=0.022). Conclusion Liver biopsy provides important diagnostic information for the management of patients with cirrhosis and suspected AIH, but the procedure is associated with significant risk.
CITATION STYLE
Sripongpun, P., Pongpaibul, A., & Charatcharoenwitthaya, P. (2021). Value and risk of percutaneous liver biopsy in patients with cirrhosis and clinical suspicion of autoimmune hepatitis. BMJ Open Gastroenterology, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgast-2021-000701
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