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Severe acute liver disease in adults: Contemporary role of histopathology

Authors
 Andrew D Clouston  ;  Annette S H Gouw  ;  Dina Tiniakos  ;  Pierre Bedossa  ;  Elizabeth M Brunt  ;  Francesco Callea  ;  Hans-Peter Dienes  ;  Zachary D Goodman  ;  Stefan G Hubscher  ;  Sanjay Kakar  ;  David E Kleiner  ;  Carolin Lackner  ;  Young N Park  ;  Eve A Roberts  ;  Peter Schirmacher  ;  Luigi Terracciano  ;  Michael Torbenson  ;  Ian R Wanless  ;  Yoh Zen  ;  Alastair D Burt 
Citation
 HISTOPATHOLOGY, Vol.85(4) : 549-561, 2024-10 
Journal Title
HISTOPATHOLOGY
ISSN
 0309-0167 
Issue Date
2024-10
MeSH
Acute Disease ; Adult ; Biopsy ; Humans ; Liver / pathology ; Liver Diseases / diagnosis ; Liver Diseases / pathology ; Liver Failure, Acute* / diagnosis ; Liver Failure, Acute* / etiology ; Liver Failure, Acute* / pathology
Keywords
acute hepatitis ; acute liver failure ; acute‐on‐chronic liver failure ; autoimmune hepatitis ; drug‐induced liver injury ; indeterminate hepatitis
Abstract
Liver biopsies have consistently contributed to our understanding of the pathogenesis and aetiologies of acute liver disease. As other diagnostic modalities have been developed and refined, the role of biopsy in the management of patients with acute liver failure (ALF), acute‐on‐chronic liver failure (ACLF) and acute hepatitis, including acute liver injury (ALI), has changed. Liver biopsy remains particularly valuable when first‐line diagnostic algorithms fail to determine aetiology. Despite not being identified as a mandatory diagnostic tool in recent clinical guidelines for the management of ALF or ACLF, many centres continue to undertake biopsies given the relative safety of transjugular biopsy in this setting. Several studies have demonstrated that liver biopsy can provide prognostic information, particularly in the context of so‐called indeterminate hepatitis, and is extremely useful in excluding conditions such as metastatic tumours that would preclude transplantation. In addition, its widespread use of percutaneous biopsies in cases of less severe acute liver injury, for example in the establishment of a diagnosis of acute presentation of autoimmune hepatitis or confirmation of a probable or definite drug‐induced liver injury (DILI), has meant that many centres have seen a shift in the ratio of specimens they are receiving from patients with chronic to acute liver disease. Histopathologists therefore need to be equipped to deal with these challenging specimens. This overview provides an insight into the contemporary role of biopsies (as well as explant and autopsy material) in diagnosing acute liver disease. It outlines up‐to‐date clinical definitions of liver injury and considers recent recommendations for the diagnosis of AIH and drug‐induced, autoimmune‐like hepatitis (DI‐AIH).
Full Text
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/his.15212
DOI
10.1111/his.15212
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Pathology (병리학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Park, Young Nyun(박영년) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0357-7967
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/200512
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