Secondary Adrenal Insufficiency after Treatment with Budesonide for Autoimmune Hepatitis

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Abstract

Autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) is a rare cause of chronic liver disease. The backbone of treatment is immunosuppressive medication, typically prednisolone as induction therapy and azathioprine as a maintenance therapy. Side effects of the long-term use of systemic corticosteroids are well known and have led to the use of alternative induction regimens. An attractive alternative is budesonide, a nonhalogenated glucocorticosteroid characterized by a high first-pass effect in the liver (90%), resulting in a high topical anti-inflammatory activity and a low systemic activity. It should be stressed that budesonide is contraindicated in patients with established cirrhosis with portal hypertension and portocaval shunting. In this case report, we present the first case of adrenal insufficiency following treatment with budesonide for AIH.

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De Maeyer, F., Lapauw, B., Hoorens, A., Geerts, A., Van Vlierberghe, H., & Verhelst, X. (2018). Secondary Adrenal Insufficiency after Treatment with Budesonide for Autoimmune Hepatitis. Case Reports in Gastroenterology, 12(3), 597–601. https://doi.org/10.1159/000492204

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