Diagnosis and management of autoimmune hepatitis

Standard

Diagnosis and management of autoimmune hepatitis. / Muratori, Luigi; Lohse, Ansgar W; Lenzi, Marco.

In: BMJ-BRIT MED J, Vol. 380, e070201, 06.02.2023.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Review articleResearch

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{04f67f8bcbd34fdca56866b91deb5532,
title = "Diagnosis and management of autoimmune hepatitis",
abstract = "Autoimmune hepatitis is an inflammatory disease of the liver of unknown cause that may progress to liver cirrhosis and end stage liver failure if diagnosis is overlooked and treatment delayed. The clinical presentation is often that of acute hepatitis, sometimes very severe; less frequently, it can be insidious or completely asymptomatic. The disease can affect people of any age and is more common in women; its incidence and prevalence seem to be on the rise worldwide. An abnormal immune response targeting liver autoantigens and inducing persistent and self-perpetuating liver inflammation is the pathogenic mechanism of the disease. A specific set of autoantibodies, increased IgG concentrations, and histological demonstration of interface hepatitis and periportal necrosis are the diagnostic hallmarks of autoimmune hepatitis. Prompt response to treatment with corticosteroids and other immunomodulatory drugs is almost universal and supports the diagnosis. The aims of treatment are to induce and maintain long term remission of liver inflammation. Treatment can often even reverse liver fibrosis, thus preventing progression to advanced cirrhosis and its complications. Most patients need lifelong maintenance therapy, and repeated follow-up in experienced hands improves the quality of care and quality of life for affected patients.",
keywords = "Humans, Female, Hepatitis, Autoimmune/diagnosis, Quality of Life, Liver Cirrhosis, Autoantibodies, Inflammation",
author = "Luigi Muratori and Lohse, {Ansgar W} and Marco Lenzi",
note = "Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.",
year = "2023",
month = feb,
day = "6",
doi = "10.1136/bmj-2022-070201",
language = "English",
volume = "380",
journal = "BMJ-BRIT MED J",
issn = "0959-535X",
publisher = "British Medical Association",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Diagnosis and management of autoimmune hepatitis

AU - Muratori, Luigi

AU - Lohse, Ansgar W

AU - Lenzi, Marco

N1 - Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.

PY - 2023/2/6

Y1 - 2023/2/6

N2 - Autoimmune hepatitis is an inflammatory disease of the liver of unknown cause that may progress to liver cirrhosis and end stage liver failure if diagnosis is overlooked and treatment delayed. The clinical presentation is often that of acute hepatitis, sometimes very severe; less frequently, it can be insidious or completely asymptomatic. The disease can affect people of any age and is more common in women; its incidence and prevalence seem to be on the rise worldwide. An abnormal immune response targeting liver autoantigens and inducing persistent and self-perpetuating liver inflammation is the pathogenic mechanism of the disease. A specific set of autoantibodies, increased IgG concentrations, and histological demonstration of interface hepatitis and periportal necrosis are the diagnostic hallmarks of autoimmune hepatitis. Prompt response to treatment with corticosteroids and other immunomodulatory drugs is almost universal and supports the diagnosis. The aims of treatment are to induce and maintain long term remission of liver inflammation. Treatment can often even reverse liver fibrosis, thus preventing progression to advanced cirrhosis and its complications. Most patients need lifelong maintenance therapy, and repeated follow-up in experienced hands improves the quality of care and quality of life for affected patients.

AB - Autoimmune hepatitis is an inflammatory disease of the liver of unknown cause that may progress to liver cirrhosis and end stage liver failure if diagnosis is overlooked and treatment delayed. The clinical presentation is often that of acute hepatitis, sometimes very severe; less frequently, it can be insidious or completely asymptomatic. The disease can affect people of any age and is more common in women; its incidence and prevalence seem to be on the rise worldwide. An abnormal immune response targeting liver autoantigens and inducing persistent and self-perpetuating liver inflammation is the pathogenic mechanism of the disease. A specific set of autoantibodies, increased IgG concentrations, and histological demonstration of interface hepatitis and periportal necrosis are the diagnostic hallmarks of autoimmune hepatitis. Prompt response to treatment with corticosteroids and other immunomodulatory drugs is almost universal and supports the diagnosis. The aims of treatment are to induce and maintain long term remission of liver inflammation. Treatment can often even reverse liver fibrosis, thus preventing progression to advanced cirrhosis and its complications. Most patients need lifelong maintenance therapy, and repeated follow-up in experienced hands improves the quality of care and quality of life for affected patients.

KW - Humans

KW - Female

KW - Hepatitis, Autoimmune/diagnosis

KW - Quality of Life

KW - Liver Cirrhosis

KW - Autoantibodies

KW - Inflammation

U2 - 10.1136/bmj-2022-070201

DO - 10.1136/bmj-2022-070201

M3 - SCORING: Review article

C2 - 36746473

VL - 380

JO - BMJ-BRIT MED J

JF - BMJ-BRIT MED J

SN - 0959-535X

M1 - e070201

ER -