Investigating GI + Liver disease Flashcards

1
Q

What are the major functions of the liver?

A
  • carbohydrate metabolism
  • fat metabolism
  • protein metabolism
  • hormone metabolism
  • drugs + foreign compounds
  • storage
  • metabolism and excretion of bilirubin
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2
Q

What are common disease processes affecting the liver?

A
  • hepatitis - damage to hepatocytes
  • cirrhosis - increased fibrosis, liver shrinkage, decreased hepatocellular function, obstruction of bile flow
  • tumours - frequently secondary: colon, stomach, bronchus
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3
Q

What are the important liver enzymes and where are they present?

A
  • Transaminases:
    • ALT: present in hepatocytes and to far less extent, skeletal muscle
    • AST: present in hepatocytes, cardiac/skeletal muscle and erythrocytes - less liver specific
  • Alkaline phosphatase: present in biliary system, bone, placenta + intestine
  • Gamma Glutamyl transferase: present in hepatocytes (induced by drugs, ETOH etc) and biliary system (cholestasis)
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4
Q

What proteins are important in liver function tests?

A
  • albumin - synthesised in liver, half-life 20days
  • clotting factors - inc INR only true test of liver ‘function’
  • a1-antitrypsin - for deficiency
  • a-fetoprotein - useful marker for hepatocellular carcinoma
  • caeruloplasmin - low levels associated w/ Wilson’s
  • ferritin - high levels associated w/ iron overload
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5
Q

Describe bilirubin conjugation within the enterohepatic circulation

A
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6
Q

What are patterns of LFTs in:

  • inflammatory pattern (hepatocellular damage)
  • cholestatic pattern
A
  • albumin concentrations tend to be decreased only in chronic liver disease
  • an INR measurement provides a sensitive and rapidly responsive index of hepatic synthetic capacity
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7
Q

Are deranged LFTs always clinically significant?

A
  • reference ranges from 2.5th to 97.5th centiles
  • isolated marginally raised values of up to approx 20% greater than upper limit of ref range are more likely to be statistical outliers rather than significant clinical findings
  • conversely, results within ref range may be abnormal for that particular patient
  • interpretation must be performed within context of patient’s risk factors, symptoms, concomitant conditions, medications and physical findings
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8
Q

How do you interpret a raised ALT?

A
  • first - exclude high EtOH intake, diabetes + inc TGs
  • if less than 2x upper limit of normal - suggest repeat in 1-3 months
  • a persistently raised ALT (ie. 1.5-3x ULN for 6 months or more) requires further investigation
  • >3x ULN (repeat not required), instigate further investigation
  • up to 40% of slightly elevated values are found to be normal on re-testing (confiremd in SGH audit)

(NB skeletal muscle contains ALT but at lower levels than in liver)

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9
Q

What are further FIRST-LINE investigations for persistently elevated ALT?

A
  • AST for AST/ALT ratio
  • FBC
    • macrocytosis + inc gGT suggests EtOH xs
    • thrombocytopenia (poss hypersplenism - portal HT)
  • Autoantibodies
    • AMA +ve -> PBC
    • ASM/ANA +ve -> AIH
  • Ferritin
    • increased, do iron binding studies, poss haemochromatosis, genetic testing maybe
  • HepB surface antigen
    • +ve -> chronic infection
  • Hep C antibody
    • +ve -> chronic infection
  • Liver USS
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10
Q

What does the AST:ALT ratio tell us?

A
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11
Q

If the first line investigations don’t provide a diagnosis, proceed to second-line. What are the second-line further investigations for persistently elevated ALT?

A
  • anti-tissue transglutaminase antibodies
    • +ve -> coeliac disease
  • a1-antitrypsin
    • if low -> deficiency; phenotyping required for confirmation
  • Caeruloplasmin
    • low -> suggests Wilson’s, further specialist investigations required for confirmation (hepatic presentation is usually earlier than neurological presentation)
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12
Q

What is the importance of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, in terms of prevalence and what it may progress to?

A
  • more prevalent than alcoholic liver disease
  • most common cause of abnormal LFTs
  • prevalence - 20% in gen pop, up to 70% in T2DM
  • stages:
    • hepatic steatosis (fat >5% liver volume)
    • non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (3-5% of population)
      • NASH greater risk of progressing to fibrosis, cirrhosis, HCC
  • obesity major risk factor
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13
Q

What are the risk factors for:

  • developing cirrhosis from NAFLD/NASH
  • developing HCC from cirrhosis (from NAFLD/NASH)
A
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14
Q

How do the typical features of NAFLD and alcoholic liver disease differ?

A
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15
Q

How do you interpret raised bilirubin?

A
  • isolated increased bilirubin -> measure conjugated bilirubin
  • conjugated bilirubin <30% of total (primary elevation of unconjugated bilirubin):
    • Gilbert’s (~3-7% of population)
      • total bilirubin levels rarely more than 80-100
      • defect in regulatory part of gene coding for bilirubin UDP-glucuronyl transferase
    • Haemolysis
      • check blood film + reticulocytes
    • Crigler-Najjar I + II (rare, paediatric pop)
      • absence/partial defect of bilirubin UDP-glucuronyl transferase
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16
Q

How do you interpret an isolated raised gamma GT?

A
  • gamma GT has limited utility as a primary liver test
  • useful to establish cause of an increased ALP
  • not a sensitive or specific marker of alcohol misuse - raised in large no. of pts w/ both alcoholic and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease
  • induced by various medications and over-the-counter preparations eg. phenytoin, st John’s wort
17
Q

How do you interpret an isolated raised ALP?

A
  • less than 1.5x ULN -> recheck 1-3 months later
  • values more than 1.5x ULN -> check for liver/bone origin w/ GGT
    • normal GGT ?bone in origin
    • check ref range appt for age + not third trimester
    • ? vit D deficient
  • values more than 1.5x ULN + inc GGT
    • made twice, six months apart -> further investigation
    • ALP levels higher in black women, age, CCF, hyperthyroid, preg, some meds
    • check ALP isoenzymes
  • Values more than 3x ULN (on one occasion) require further investigation
18
Q

What are tests to check for liver fibrosis?

A
  • procollagen III N-terminal peptide (P3NP)
    • used in long term methotrexate treatment to monitor for development of liver fibrosis
  • european liver fibrosis test (ELF test)
    • 3 serum biomarkers:
      • hyaluronic acid (HA)
      • procollagen III amino terminal peptide (PIIINP)
      • tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 1 (TIMP-1)
    • uses an algorithm to calculate fibrosis score
    • NICE guidelines July 2016:
      • consider ELF in ppl who have been diagnosed w NAFLD to test for advanced liver fibrosis
      • advanced liver fibrosis = ELF score >10.51 + NAFLD
19
Q

What liver tests are used to test for alcohol?

A
  • carbohydrate deficient transferrin (CDT)
    • EtOH misuse - commonest reason for inc CDT
    • typically level of alcohol intake required to prod a CDT result of 3.0% is 100-150g EtOH/day
      • CDT < or = 1.5% : no XS alcohol intake
      • CDT 1.6-1.9% : intake high but not in range of dependence
      • CDT > or = 2% : XS alcohol intake
  • Ethanol metabolites - ethyl glucuronide + ethyl sulphate
    • positive for up to 3 days after ethanol consumption
    • potential for detection of occult/denied alcoholism
20
Q

What does faecal calprotectin test for?

A
  • stable zinc + calcium binding protein belonging to S100 family that is derived mostly from neutrophils + monocytes
  • released into faeces when neutrophils gather at site of any GI inflammation
  • useful for differentiating between IBS and IBD in younger age group (pts <40yrs)
  • not a useful marker for malignancy
21
Q

What does faecal elastase test for?

A
  • non-invasive assessment of pancreatic exocrine insufficiency
  • has been shown to correlate well w/ more invasive tests of exocrine pancreatic funtion such as the Secretin Pancreozymin test
  • pancreatic elastase is also gaining an increasing role of assessment of cystic fibrosis patients
22
Q

What does occult blood (FOBT) test for?

A
  • bowel cancer screening programme
  • most labs do not offer FOBT despite NICE guidelines which recommends FOBT testing for pts w/ abdo pain and without rectal bleeding to assess for colorectal cancer who also have:
    • abdo pain or
    • weight loss or
    • age <60 + have change in bowel habit or
    • iron-def anaemia
  • quantitative faecal immunochemical tests to guide referral for colorectal cancer in primary care -> new FIT test to replace FOBT
23
Q

What do the following tumour markers look for?

  • CA199
  • CEA
  • AFPT
  • CA125
A
  • CA199: in pts in whom pancreatic cancer is strongly suspected CA19-9 may complement other diagnostic procedures, can be raised in cholestasis due to non-malignant conditions
  • CEA: colorectal cancer, but may be raise din IBS, CRF, pleural inflammation, high in smokers
  • AFPT: hepatocellular carinoma (in conjunction w USS)
  • CA125: ovarian cancer marker, but may be raised in any condition which causes peritoneal inflammation (incl urinary retention + ascites)
24
Q

What is hepatic elastography? What’s it used for?

A
  • transient elastography (FibroScan) is used to assess pts w/ chronic liver disease (hepC/B, alcohol abuse, fatty liver)
  • concept is that as more fibrosis + scarring occur, the higher the liver stiffness reading will be
  • the reading may be used to:
    • estimate existing degree of liver damage
    • monitor disease progression/regression w/ serial measurements
    • guide prognosis + further mgmt, inclduing Rx