430 likes | 878 Views
Question 1. A 57-year-old man is evaluated because of persistent serum aminotransferase elevations. Medical history is significant for stage II colon CA that was resected 6 years ago. There has been no evidence of recurrence. The patient has been taking atorvastatin for 5 years for management of hyperlipidemia. He recently required amox/clav for the treatment of acute sinusitis, which has resolved. He drinks 3-4 glasses of wine on weekends. PE discloses only mild hepatomegaly. BMI is 32.34453
E N D
1. Gastroenterology and HepatologyBoard Review Jeff Singerman
June 13, 2007
2. Question 1 A 57-year-old man is evaluated because of persistent serum aminotransferase elevations. Medical history is significant for stage II colon CA that was resected 6 years ago. There has been no evidence of recurrence. The patient has been taking atorvastatin for 5 years for management of hyperlipidemia. He recently required amox/clav for the treatment of acute sinusitis, which has resolved. He drinks 3-4 glasses of wine on weekends. PE discloses only mild hepatomegaly. BMI is 32.
Labs: Glc-124, LDL-122, HDL-56, Tri-185, AST-92 (was normal 2 years ago, 87 1 year ago), ALT-104 (was normal 2 years ago, 106 1 year ago), AP-62, Bili-0.7, Albumin-4.5, INR-1.1
CT scan of the abdomen shows low-density hepatic parenchyma.
3. Question 1 continued Which of the following is most likely causing this patient’s elevated serum aminotransferase values?
Recurrence of colon cancer
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
Administration of amoxicillin/clavulanate
Primary biliary cirrhosis
Alcohol use
4. Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD) Spectrum of disorders characterized by predominantly macrovesicular hepatic steatosis that occur in individuals even in the absence of consumption of alcohol.
5. Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD) Risk Factors: Obesity, DM, dyslipidemia, severe weight loss, some drugs
Drugs: Amiodarone, Tamoxifen, Glucocorticoids, synthetic estrogens
Evaluation: LFTs, Hep B, Hep C, EtOH hx
Imaging: US, CT, or MRI
All can detect steatosis and rule out other causes
Cannot distinguish between fatty liver, steatohepatitis, and steatohepatitis with fibrosis
Confirmation: Liver biopsy
Treatment: Weight loss
6. NAFLD and NASH
7. Non-Alcoholic Steatohepatitis (NASH) Subset of NAFLD
Liver bx showing moderate to gross macrovesicular fatty changes (with or without fibrosis or cirrhosis)
Negligible EtOH consumption (<40 g/week)
Absence of infectious hepatitis (Hep B, Hep C)
Risk Factors: Obesity, DM, hyperlipidemia
8. Non-Alcoholic Steatohepatitis (NASH) Diagnosis
Most are asymptomatic
Fatigue, malaise, vague RUQ discomfort
Hepatomegaly
Elevated LFTs (although can be normal in advanced fibrosis)
Confirmation: Liver biopsy
9. Non-Alcoholic Steatohepatitis (NASH) Progression to cirrhosis in 8-26%
Predictors of fibrosis:
Age > 45 or 50
BMI > 28
Triglycerides > 1.7 mmol/L
ALT > 2 x normal
AST:ALT > 1
Treatment: none proven
Weight loss
Insulin sensitizers: metformin, rosiglitazone, pioglitazone
10. Question 2 A 66-year-old woman comes for her annual physical examination. She reports only mild fatigue. The patient has prediabetes that is managed by diet alone. She takes no meds and drinks one glass of wine each day. On exam, BP 132/86, BMI is 32, otherwise normal.
Labs: Hb-13.1, Plt-85, Glc (fasting)-119, lipids-nl, AST-138, ALT-124, AP-50, Bili-0.8, Alb-3.1, Hep A,B,C-negative, Transferrin-nl, UA-nl
Abd US: evidence of mild fatty infiltration of the liver.
11. Question 2 continued In addition to weight loss, which of the following is the most appropriate next step for managing this patient’s liver chemistry abnormalities?
Rosiglitazone; repeat liver tests in 6 months
Alcohol counseling
Liver biopsy
Evaluation for liver transplantation
12. Question 3 A 24-year-old man has intermittent dysphagia for solid foods that has required two visits to the emergency department in the past 6 years for endoscopic removal of pieces of chicken. The patient has no weight loss or heartburn. He has always been a slow eater. He has mild asthma and uses a beta-agonist inhaler intermittently. On exam, the patient is well developed. General exam is normal. EGD reveals some mild ring formation in the mid-esophagus. Esophageal biopsy specimens show intense eosinophilic infiltration.
13. Question 3 continued Which of the following is the most appropriate therapy for this patient’s dysphagia?
A long-term PPI
Topical swallowed corticosteroids
Oral nifedipine before meals
Sublingual nifedipine before meals
14. Eosinophilic Esophagitis A new diagnosis with accelerating incidence
Characterized by eosinphilic infiltration of the esophagus
Unclear etiology: allergic?
15. Eosinophilic Esophagitis Epidemiology: In adults, most commonly seen in males, age 20-30
Clinical Characteristics
Dysphagia ± morphologic abnormalities
Strictures (most common, usually proximal)
Rings (occasionally multiple)
Linear furrows
“Feline esophagus”
“Too-small esophagus”
Food impaction
Esophageal dysmotility (occasionally)
History of asthma and peripheral eosinophilia
16. Eosinophilic Esophagitis Diagnosis: consensus not yet achieved
1) Presence of characteristic clinical findings
2) Presence of large number of eosinophils in the esopghagus
Usually > 20 eos/hpf (GERD usually < 5 eos/hpf)
3) Exclusion of other causes
17. Eosinophilic Esophagitis
18. Eosinophilic Esophagitis Treatment:
Swallowed Steroids (fluticasone MDI)
Esophageal Dilation (carefully)
Elimination Diets (unclear utility in adults)
Acid suppression usually not helpful
19. Question 4 A 53-year-old woman has a 6-month history of increasing diarrhea without bleeding or a sense of urgency. She has 3 or 4 bowel movements daily compared with her previous pattern of two or three bowel movements each day. The patient has lost 6 pounds during this time. Medical history is significant for hypothyroidism, managed with thyroid replacement therapy. The patient is post-menopausal and has had no abnormal vaginal bleeding. She has maintained a lifelong milk-free diet. Physical exam is normal. BMI is 21
Labs: Hb-9.8 (was 13.5 1 year ago), WBC-6.5, Plt-250, MCV-85, RDW-19 (elevated), Ferritin-10, Alb-4.5, LFTs-nl, TSH-nl, Anti-TTG Ab-negative, Stool cultures/c. dif/O and P are negative
Upper GI series with small-bowel follow-through is normal. Colonoscopy with random biopsies is also normal
20. Question 4 continued Which of the following diagnostic studies should be scheduled next?
Antiendomysial antibody assay
Serum calcitonin measurement
Upper endoscopy with small bowel biopsies
Serum gastrin measurement
Capsule endoscopy
21. Celiac Disease All testing must be done on a gluten-containing diet
Serum Antibody Assays
IgA Endomysial Ab
Sensitivity 85-98%, Specificity 97-100%
IgA TTG Ab
Sensitivity 93%, Specificity 99%
IgA Antigliadin Ab
Sensitivity 75-90%, Specificity 82-95%
IgG Antigliadin Ab
Sensitivity 69-85%, Specificity 73-90%
Antigliadin antibodies no longer recommended for screening or diagnosis except in cases of IgA deficiency
22. Celiac Disease
23. Celiac Disease Anemia and Celiac Disease
Iron deficiency is common (can be the only manifestation of celiac in adults).
Due to malabsorption rather than GI blood loss
Macrocytic anemia can be seen as well
Usually secondary to folate deficiency, B12 deficiency is rare
With both entities, can see a normocytic anemia with an increased RDW.
24. Steroids in Alcoholic Hepatitis Controversial
12 controlled trials performed
5 showed reduced mortality vs. placebo
7 showed no difference vs. placebo
3 metanalyses
2 showed a beneficial effect
1 showed benefit or harm depending on subgroup
25. Steroids in Alcoholic Hepatitis ACG Guidelines:
Corticosteroids should be used in patients with severe alcoholic hepatitis and/or hepatic encephalopathy
Severe described by prothrombin discriminate function > 32
[4.6 x (prothrombin time above control in seconds) + Bili]
The efficacy of steroids has not been adequately studied in patients with severe alcoholic hepatitis who also have:
Concomitant pancreatitis
Renal failure
GI bleeding
Active infection
Histological confirmation of alcoholic hepaititis optimizes the selection of these patients. However, must be weighed against risk of performing biopsy
26. Steroids in Alcoholic Hepatitis Treatment:
Prednisolone 40mg daily x 4 weeks followed by a taper
Prednisone is not used as is converted to predisolone in the liver
Reduces mortality by 25%
Although mortality remains as high as 44% in patients receiving steroids
NNT = 7
27. Cholecystectomy inAsymptomatic Cholelithiasis There are no indications for cholecystectomy in asymptomatic cholelithiasis, with a few exceptions:
Many patients at increased risk for biliary CA should get prophylactic cholecystectomy or incidental cholecystectomy at time of other intra-abdominal surgery.
Choledocal cysts
Caroli’s Disease
Anomalous pancreatic ductal drainage (into CBD)
Gallbladder adenomas
Porcelain gallbladder
28. Cholecystectomy inAsymptomatic Cholelithiasis Sickle Cell Disease
Pigmented stones are common and often asymptomatic
Not an indication for prophylactic cholecystectomy, but may be taken out incidentally during another procedure
Hereditary Spherocytosis
Bilirubin stones
Indication for prophylactic or incidental cholecystectomy
Gastric Bypass Surgery
Incidental cholecystectomy recommended at the time of surgery
29. Cholecystectomy inAsymptomatic Cholelithiasis Diabetes Mellitus
Increased risk for developing severe gangrenous cholecystitis
However, prophylactic cholecystectomy is not recommended secondary to increased risk of surgery.
30. Colon Cancer Screening Average risk patients:
Offer one of the following beginning at age 50
FOBT yearly
Sigmoidoscopy q5yrs
Combined FOBT/Sigmoid q1yr/q5yrs
Colonoscopy q10yrs (no trials)
Double Contrast Barium Enema q5yrs (no trials)
31. Colon Cancer Screening Family history of colon CA
1st degree relative with colon CA or adenomatous polyps on bx age < 60 OR two 1st degree relatives dx with colorectal CA at any age
Colonoscopy at age 40 or 10 years earlier that the earliest diagnosis in their family, whichever comes first
Repeat colonoscopy every 5 years
1st degree relative with colon CA or adenomatous polyp dx age > 60 OR two 2nd degree relatives with colon cancer
Screen like average risk patients but start at age 40
32. Colon Cancer Screening Personal History of Polyps
1-2 small (<1 cm) tubular adenomas with only low-grade dysplasia
Colonoscopy every 5-10 years
3-10 adenomas or any adenoma > 1cm, or any adenoma with villous features or hi-grade dysplasia
Colonoscopy every 3 years
>10 adenomas
Colonoscopy more frequent than every 3 years, determined by clinical judgment
Sessile adenomas that are removed piecemeal
Colonoscopy at 2-6 months to verify complete removal
33. Colon Cancer Screening Personal History of Colon CA resection:
Pre-op or peri-op colonoscopy on all patients
Subsequent colonoscopies at 3 years post surgery and then, if normal, every 5 years
For those patients with an obstructing mass:
Full colonoscopy within 6 months of surgery
34. Colon Cancer Screening Familial syndromes
HNPCC
Begin at age 20-25, or 10 years earlier than youngest age of colon CA dx in the family, whichever comes first
Colonoscopy every 1-2 years
FAP
Begin at age 10-12 and continue until age 35-40 if negative
Flex sig or colonoscopy yearly
Classic FAP always isolated to rectosigmoid, attenuated FAP can be right sided
+/- genetic counseling and testing
35. Colon Cancer Screening Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Ulcerative Colitis
AGA: colonoscopy after 8 years of diagnosis in patients with pancolitis and 15 years in patients with only left sided involvement; Repeat every 1-2 years
ACG: annual colonoscopy beginning after 8-10 years of diagnosis in patients who are surgical candidates. Evidence of definite dysplasia warrants referral for colectomy.
Crohn’s Disease
AGA: same as for UC
ACG: insufficient evidence for guidelines
36. Question 5 A 40-year old woman has an 18-year history of UC that is limited to the left side and has responded well to therapy. Recent surveillance colonoscopy with biopsies showed low-grade dysplasia. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step?
Repeat colonoscopy in 3 months
Repeat colonoscopy in 1-2 years
Administer sulindac
Administer a low-dose corticosteroid
Refer for colectomy
37. Question 6 A 32-year-old man comes for an annual health maintenance visit. His mother was diagnosed with colorectal cancer at 55 years of age. The patient reports no rectal bleeding or other symptoms. Medical history is noncontributory except for hypercholesterolemia. PE is normal. When should this patient first undergo colorectal cancer screening?
Now
At age 40 years
At age 45 years
At age 50 years
38. Question 7 A 65-year-old woman underwent initial colonoscopy 1 month ago for colorectal cancer screening. A 6mm tubular adenoma of the sigmoid colon was found and removed. The patient has no family history of colorectal cancer. Which of the following is the most appropriate recommendation for colorectal cancer surveillance for this patient?
Repeat colonoscopy in 1 year
Repeat colonoscopy in 3 years
Repeat colonoscopy in 5 years
Flexible sigmoidoscopy in 5 years
Virtual colonoscopy (CT colonography) in 5 years
39. Question 8 A 50-year-old man comes for an annual health maintenance visit. He feels well, and medical history is unremarkable. There is no family history of colorectal cancer. Physical examination and routine labs are normal. Which of the following is the most appropriate recommendation for colorectal cancer screening for this patient?
FOBT now, repeat every 2-3 years
Flex sig now, repeat every 2-3 years
Barium enema now, repeat every 2-3 years
Colonoscopy now, repeat every 10 years
Virtual colonoscopy now, repeat every 10 years
40. Question 9 Three months ago, a 62-year-old man underwent segmental sigmoid colon resection for a near-obstructing colorectal cancer found of flex-sig. Surgery was considered curative, and the patient did not require post-op chemo or radiation. He has no family history of colorectal cancer or polyps. On follow-up exam today, he feels well. PE is normal. Which of the following is the most appropriate colorectal cancer surveillance procedure for this patient?
Colonoscopy now
Colonoscopy in 1 year
Colonoscopy in 3 years
CT scan of the abdomen now
CT scan of the abdomen in 3 years
41. Question 10 A 67-year-old man undergoes diagnostic colonoscopy after he has a positive FOBT. A sigmoid colon CA is found. The remainer of the colonoscopic exam is normal. A CT of the abdomen shows no mets. CEA is slightly elevated. The patient undergoes resectino of the sigmoid with good results. Post-op recommendations include follow-up office visits every 3 months for 3 years, CEA measurement, and surveillance colonoscopy.
42. Question 10 Continued When should the first surveillance colonoscopy be performed?
In 1 year
In 3 years
In 5 years
Only if CEA level increases