| Literature DB >> 25765710 |
Fan Yang1, Qixia Wang1, Zhaolian Bian1, Lin-Lin Ren1, Jidong Jia2, Xiong Ma1.
Abstract
Autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) is an inflammatory liver disease with diverse clinical spectrum, which predominantly affects females. This review provides detailed comparisons of epidemiology, genetic predispositions, clinical features, risk factors of hepatocellular carcinoma, and mortality in AIH patients between eastern and western countries. AIH prevalence and incidence are lower in Asia-Pacific area than in Europe and America. European and American patients seem to have more severe disease, characterized with human leukocyte antigen-DR3 haplotype, younger age, more AIH-induced "cirrhosis" at diagnosis, higher elevated serum immunoglobulin G levels, and positive rate of antisoluble liver antigen/liver pancreatitis. The overall AIH diagnostic accuracy of revised original criteria and simplified scoring system are similar in European/American populations and Asian. Cirrhosis at presentation and non-response to immunosuppressive therapy within 1 year are the most important predictors for poor prognosis of AIH patients.Entities:
Keywords: autoimmune disease; autoimmune hepatitis; autoimmune liver disease; liver disease
Mesh:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25765710 DOI: 10.1111/jgh.12952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gastroenterol Hepatol ISSN: 0815-9319 Impact factor: 4.029