Current concepts in primary sclerosing cholangitis.

OBJECTIVE To describe primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) and its associated complications, as well as medical and surgical treatment. DESIGN A review of PSC and its associated etiopathologic factors is presented; numerous studies of agents that are used to treat patients with PSC are discussed. RESULTS PSC, a slowly progressive disease that often involves autoimmune damage to the biliary tree, is frequently associated with inflammatory bowel disease, usually chronic ulcerative colitis. Long-term follow-up of patients with PSC has revealed a high incidence of colon cancer and bile duct cancer, both of which are most likely related to the chronic inflammation involving these two organs. Although PSC is an unusual disease, it is now diagnosed with approximately the same frequency as is primary biliary cirrhosis. The histopathologic evolution of PSC results in irreversible damage to bile ducts, which ultimately leads to cholestasis, cirrhosis, liver failure, and premature death from liver failure unless liver transplantation is performed. Therefore, the best chance of achieving success is to treat patients with early-stage disease rather than those with irreversible end-stage cirrhotic disease. Although several medical therapies for PSC have been evaluated, only D-penicillamine, cyclosporine, methotrexate, and, most recently, ursodeoxycholic acid have been studied in controlled clinical trials. Furthermore, several surgical therapies for PSC and its associated complications have been assessed. CONCLUSION Currently, no therapy achieves a complete clinical, biochemical, or histologic remission in this disease. Until the etiopathogenesis of PSC is further defined, effective therapy is unlikely to be found. Thus, liver transplantation will continue to be an important therapeutic intervention for the management of patients with end-stage PSC.

[1]  J. Ludwig,et al.  Elevated Circulating Immune Complexes in Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis , 2007, Hepatology.

[2]  D. V. van Thiel,et al.  Evolution of Liver Transplantation , 2007, Hepatology.

[3]  H. Pitt,et al.  Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis: Results of an Aggressive Surgical Approach , 1982, Annals of surgery.

[4]  M. Horwitz,et al.  Biliary atresia and reovirus type 3 infection. , 1982, The New England journal of medicine.

[5]  M. Kaplan,et al.  A prospective trial of D-penicillamine in primary biliary cirrhosis. , 1982, The New England journal of medicine.

[6]  E. Schrumpf,et al.  Sclerosing cholangitis in ulcerative colitis. A follow-up study. , 1982, Scandinavian journal of gastroenterology.

[7]  R. Wiesner,et al.  Morphologic features of chronic hepatitis associated with primary sclerosing cholangitis and chronic ulcerative colitis , 1981, Hepatology.

[8]  S. Sherlock,et al.  D-PENICILLAMINE TREATMENT IMPROVES SURVIVAL IN PRIMARY BILIARY CIRRHOSIS , 1981, The Lancet.

[9]  R. Chapman,et al.  Primary sclerosing cholangitis: a review of its clinical features, cholangiography, and hepatic histology. , 1980, Gut.

[10]  I. Sternlieb,et al.  Chronic hepatitis as a first manifestation of Wilson's disease. , 1972, Annals of internal medicine.

[11]  L. Powell,et al.  Primary intrahepatic obliterating cholangitis: a possible variant of `sclerosing cholangitis' , 1969, Gut.

[12]  S. Sherlock,et al.  Primary sclerosing cholangitis, the biliary tree, and ulcerative colitis. , 1967, Gut.