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Progressive histological damage in liver allografts following paediatric liver transplantation. Helen M Evans 1 , Deirdre A Kelly 1 , Patrick J McKiernan 1 and Stefan G Hübscher 2
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Progressive histological damage in liver allografts following paediatric liver transplantation Helen M Evans1, Deirdre A Kelly1, Patrick J McKiernan1 and Stefan G Hübscher2 1The Liver Unit, Birmingham Children’s Hospital, United Kingdom and 2Department of Pathology, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom
Background • Histological Findings in Late (>12 months) Post-Transplant Biopsies • Chronic hepatitis in the liver allograft • Specific issues relating to the paediatric liver allograft recipient
Histological Findings in Late (>12 months) Post-Transplant Biopsies(Nakhleh 1990, Hübscher1990, Hübscher 1993, Pappo 1995 Rosenthal 1997, Slapak 1997, Pessoa 1998, Davison 1998,Sebagh 2003, Heneghan 2003, Rifai 2004, Nakhleh 2005) • Studies in adults suggest that the majority (70-90%) develop histological abnormalities • Many seen in protocol biopsies obtained from people who are clinically well with good graft function • Recurrent disease (particularly HCV) is the commonest aetiological factor. • Rejection relatively uncommon. May have different features to those seen in the early post-transplant period. • Many biopsies have features of chronic hepatitis. • In a varying proportion of cases no obvious cause for chronic hepatitis can be identified
Histological Findings in Late (>12 months) Post-Transplant Biopsies(Nakhleh 1990, Hübscher1990, Hübscher 1993, Pappo 1995 Rosenthal 1997, Slapak 1997, Pessoa 1998, Davison 1998,Sebagh 2003, Heneghan 2003, Rifai 2004, Nakhleh 2005)
Factors Influencing the Assessment of Late Post-transplant biopsies • Nature of original liver disease • Indication for liver biopsy (protocol or clinically indicated) • Type/amount of immunosuppression used • Recurrent disease versus other transplant complications • Diagnostic criteria
Chronic Hepatitis in the Liver Allograft Possible Causes • VIRAL INFECTION (recurrent or acquired) - hepatitis B - hepatitis C • RECURRENT AUTOIMMUNE DISEASE - autoimmune hepatitis - primary biliary cirrhosis - primary sclerosing cholangitis • ‘DE NOVO’ AUTOIMMUNE HEPATITIS • DRUG TOXICITY • UNKNOWN (?REJECTION)
Chronic Hepatitis in the Liver Allograft Possible Causes • VIRAL INFECTION (recurrent or acquired) - hepatitis B - hepatitis C • RECURRENT AUTOIMMUNE DISEASE - autoimmune hepatitis - primary biliary cirrhosis - primary sclerosing cholangitis • ‘DE NOVO’ AUTOIMMUNE HEPATITIS • DRUG TOXICITY • UNKNOWN (?REJECTION)
Chronic Hepatitis in the Liver Allograft Possible Causes • VIRAL INFECTION (recurrent or acquired) - hepatitis B - hepatitis C • RECURRENT AUTOIMMUNE DISEASE - autoimmune hepatitis - primary biliary cirrhosis - primary sclerosing cholangitis In some cases histological features of “non-specific” chronic hepatitis may precede development of more typical biochemical, serological or histological changes • ‘DE NOVO’ AUTOIMMUNE HEPATITIS • DRUG TOXICITY • UNKNOWN (?REJECTION)
Chronic Hepatitis in the Liver Allograft Possible Causes • VIRAL INFECTION (recurrent or acquired) - hepatitis B - hepatitis C • RECURRENT AUTOIMMUNE DISEASE - autoimmune hepatitis - primary biliary cirrhosis - primary sclerosing cholangitis • ‘DE NOVO’ AUTOIMMUNE HEPATITIS • DRUG TOXICITY • UNKNOWN (?REJECTION)
‘De Novo’ Autoimmune Hepatitis in the Liver Allograft(Kerkar 1998, Jones 1999, Gupta 2001, Heneghan 2001, Salcedo 2002, Czaja 2002, Vergani 2002, Mieli-Vergani 2004). • Classical biochemical, serological and histological features of AIH may develop in patients transplanted for other diseases • Higher incidence in paediatric population (up to 5-10%) • In adult population commonest underlying diseases are PBC and PSC. • Most cases respond to increased immunosuppression. Occasional cases have progressed to graft failure
‘De Novo’ Autoimmune Hepatitis in the Liver Allograft Problems with Classification • Antibodies directed against graft antigens rather than self antigens (alloimmune rather than autoimmune disease?) • Autoantibodies arising de novo following transplantation also described transiently in association with episodes of rejection. (Lohse 1999, Duclos-Vallee 2000) • Acute rejection episodes have predictive value for development of de novo AIH (D’Antiga 2002,Miyagawa-Hayashino 2004) • “De novo” AIH may represent a form of late cellular rejection • “Graft dysfunction mimicking autoimmune hepatitis“ may be a better term (Heneghan et alHepatology 2001 ;34 :464-70)
Chronic Hepatitis in the Liver Allograft Possible Causes • VIRAL INFECTION (recurrent or acquired) - hepatitis B - hepatitis C • RECURRENT AUTOIMMUNE DISEASE - autoimmune hepatitis - primary biliary cirrhosis - primary sclerosing cholangitis • ‘DE NOVO’ AUTOIMMUNE HEPATITIS • DRUG TOXICITY - chronic hepatitis not typical of immunosuppressive drug toxicity - 7/31 cases of post-transplant hepatitis (patients at low risk for disease recurrence) = probable drug toxicity (Nakhleh Transplant Proc. 2005 Mar;37(2):1240-2) • UNKNOWN (?REJECTION)
Chronic Hepatitis in the Liver Allograft Possible Causes • VIRAL INFECTION (recurrent or acquired) - hepatitis B - hepatitis C • RECURRENT AUTOIMMUNE DISEASE - autoimmune hepatitis - primary biliary cirrhosis - primary sclerosing cholangitis • ‘DE NOVO’ AUTOIMMUNE HEPATITIS • DRUG TOXICITY • UNKNOWN (?REJECTION)
Late Cellular Rejection Different Histological Features(Snover 1988, Kemnitz 1989, Cakaloglu 1995, Pappo 1995) • Bile duct inflammation and venular endothelial inflammation less conspicuous • More prominent interface hepatitis • More prominent lobular hepatitis with spotty necrosis • Overall features resemble those seen in chronic hepatitis (e.g. viral or autoimmune)
Late Post-Transplant Histology in the Paediatric Population • Few studies have specifically assessed late post-transplant biopsies in children undergoing liver transplantation • Most of the diseases for which transplantation carried out in children do not recur. Chronic hepatitis in the paediatric liver allograft recipient not due to recurrent disease • Children more susceptible than adults to develop ‘de novo’ autoimmune hepatitis
Methods Patients & Biopsies 210 children transplanted between 1983 and 1996 158 alive with graft survival > 5 years - age 0.0- 15.9 years (median 2.9, mean 4.7) - 69 (44%) whole livers, 89 (56%) reduced size (81 cut down, 8 split) Protocol biopsies at 1, 5 and 10 years post-transplant Other investigations: - standard LFTs (AST, bilirubin, Alk Phos) - immunoglobulins A, G, M - autoantibodies (ANA, SMA, AMA, LKM) - ≥ 1:25 = positive - CMV and EBV serology - HBV, HCV and HGV serology (if biopsy showed chronic hepatitis)
Indications for transplantation (158 cases) Indication for transplantation Number % • Cholestatic disorders 85 53.4 Extra hepatic biliary atresia 77 48.4 Other 8 5.0 • Fulminant hepatic failure 23 15.1 Non-A, non-B, non-C acute hepatitis 15 9.5 Viral hepatitis (HAV -3, Echovrus -1) 4 2.5 Drug-induced 4 2.5 • Metabolic disorders 23 15.1 Alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency 8 5.0 Tyrosinaemia type 1 5 3.1 Wilson’s disease 6 3.8 Other 4 2.5 • Autoimmune diseases 8 5.0 Autoimmune hepatitis 3 1.9 Sclerosing cholangitis 5 3.1 • Miscellaneous 19 11.9 Cryptogenic cirrhosis 7 4.4 Cystic fibrosis 6 3.8 Hepatoblastoma 4 2.5 Other 2 1.2
Methods Histological Assessments • Histological data recorded using a long-term biopsy proforma (since 1989) • Range of portal and parenchymal features assessed, some semi-quantitatively graded • Final diagnostic category assigned • Statistical analyses • Chi-squared test to demonstrate differences in frequencies of observations at 1, 5 and 10 years • Logistic regression to investigate factors associated with histological abnormalities at 5 years (time at which most biopsies available)
Methods Assessment of Inflammatory Activity and Fibrosis(cases with chronic hepatitis) Inflammatory Activity Grade • Interface hepatitis (0-3) • Lobular necro-inflammation (0-3) • Overall inflammatory grade (0-3) Fibrosis Stage • 0 = none • 1 = mild (fibrous expansion without bridging) • 2 = moderate (bridging fibrosis) • 3 = cirrhosis
Methods Variables Assessed Statistically Demographic variables • Underlying liver disease • Age (recipient and donor) • Sex (recipient and donor) • Blood group (recipient and donor) • CMV status (recipient and donor) • Cold ischaemic time • Type of allograft (whole, reduced or split) Dynamic variables (at time of biopsy) • Transaminase levels (ALT and AST) • Immunoglobulin levels • Autoantibody positivity
ResultsBiopsies at Different Time Points 1 year 113/158 (72%) biopsied (10-17 months, mean 14 months) • No graft loss or death between 1-5 years 5 years 135/158 (85%) biopsied (49-87 months, mean 62 months) • 11 graft losses between 5-10 years • 7 deaths (rec disease-4, bacterial sepsis-2, SAH-1) • 4 retransplanted (biliary obstruction-2, chronic rejection-1, de novo AIH-1) 10 years 64/81 (79%) biopsied (102-132 months, mean 117 months) Configuration of patients similar at 3 time points (no drop-out bias)
Main Histological Findings at 1, 5 and 10 years (1) & (2) p < 0.0001
Chronic Hepatitis 124 biopsies 25 – 1 year, 58 – 5 years, 41 – 10 yearsNecroinflammatory Activity
Chronic Hepatitis Severity of Necro-inflammatory Activity at Different Times
Chronic Hepatitis – Histological FindingsInflammatory Changes
Chronic Hepatitis (mild)- Portal inflammation, mild interface hepatitisMale, age 8, 1 year post-transplant for cryptogenic cirrhosis
Chronic Hepatitis (mild) – Portal lymphoid follicleFemale, age 6, 5 years post-transplant for acute liver failure (seronegative hepatitis)
Chronic Hepatitis (mild) - Spotty lobular inflammation (zone 3)Female, age 44, 8 years post-transplant for PBC
Chronic Hepatitis (mild) - Zone 3 inflammation with dropout Female, age 24, 1 year post-transplant for acute liver failure (seronegative hepatitis)
Chronic Hepatitis - Isolated zone 3 inflammation Female, age 24, 1 year post-transplant for acute liver failure (seronegative hepatitis)
Chronic Hepatitis (moderate) – portal and lobular (zone 3) inflammationMale, age 3, 2.5 years post-transplant for biliary atresia
Chronic Hepatitis (moderate) – Portal inflammtion with interface hepatitisMale, age 3, 2.5 years post-transplant for biliary atresia
Chronic Hepatitis (moderate) – Zone 3 necro-inflammationMale, age 3, 2.5 years post-transplant for biliary atresia Normal Hepatic Vein
Chronic Hepatitis (moderate) - Portal plasma cells Female,age 58, 1 year post-transplant for PBC (no other autoantibodies)
Chronic Hepatitis (severe) – Portal inflammation with interface hepatitisFemale, age 57, 12 years post-transplant for PBC
Chronic Hepatitis (severe) – bridging necrosisFemale, age 30, 3 years post-transplant for fibrolamellar HCC
Chronic Hepatitis (severe) – bridging necrosis Female, age 30, 3 years post-transplant for fibrolamellar HCC
Chronic Hepatitis (severe) – panacinar necrosisFemale, age 30, 3 years post-transplant for fibrolamellar HCC
Chronic Hepatitis (mild) Female, age 28, 3 years post-transplant for acute liver failure (paracetamol)
Chronic hepatitis (mild) ? Cellular rejection - Bile duct inflammationFemale, age 28, 3 years post-transplant for acute liver failure (paracetamol)
Chronic hepatitis (mild) ? Cellular rejection – Portal venulitis Female, age 28, 3 years post-transplant for acute liver failure (paracetamol)
Chronic hepatitis (mild) ? Cellular rejection – Bile duct loss Female, age 28, 3 years post-transplant for acute liver failure (paracetamol)
Chronic Hepatitis - Bridging FibrosisFemale, age 53, 4 years post-transplant for acute liver failure (seronegative hepatitis)
Chronic Hepatitis – CirrhosisMale, age 21, 8 years post-transplant for cystic fibrosis
Chronic Hepatitis Severity of Fibrosis at Different Times (P<0.0001)
Correlation between AST levels and Histology P < 0.005 Other histology vs normal/chronic hepatitis at 1 year
Correlation between Autoantibodies and Histology P< 0.0001 (normal vs CH) 4 children with chronic hepatitis and autoantibodies (1 at 5 years + 3 at 10 years) had other features supporting a diagnosis of de novo AIH (AST>1.5xN, raised immunoglobulins)