| Literature DB >> 28970719 |
Benedetta Terziroli Beretta-Piccoli1, Giorgina Mieli-Vergani2, Diego Vergani3.
Abstract
Autoimmune hepatitis is a rare chronic inflammatory liver disease, affecting all ages, characterised by elevated transaminase and immunoglobulin G levels, positive autoantibodies, interface hepatitis at liver histology and good response to immunosuppressive treatment. If untreated, it has a poor prognosis. The aim of this review is to summarize the evidence for standard treatment and to provide a systematic review on alternative treatments for adults and children. Standard treatment is based on steroids and azathioprine, and leads to disease remission in 80%-90% of patients. Alternative first line treatment has been attempted with budesonide or cyclosporine, but their superiority compared to standard treatment remains to be demonstrated. Second-line treatments are needed for patients not responding or intolerant to standard treatment. No randomized controlled trials have been performed for second-line options. Mycophenolate mofetil is the most widely used second-line drug, and has good efficacy particularly for patients intolerant to azathioprine, but has the major disadvantage of being teratogenic. Only few and heterogeneous data on cyclosporine, tacrolimus, everolimus and sirolimus are available. More recently, experience with the anti-tumour necrosis factor-alpha infliximab and the anti-CD20 rituximab has been published, with ambivalent results; these agents may have severe side-effects and their use should be restricted to specialized centres. Clinical trials with new therapeutic options are ongoing.Entities:
Keywords: Adults; Autoimmune hepatitis; Children; Second-line treatment; Standard treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28970719 PMCID: PMC5597495 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v23.i33.6030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1007-9327 Impact factor: 5.742
Figure 1Selection of relevant articles for the systematic literature review on alternative AIH treatments. AIH: Autoimmune hepatitis; LT: Liver transplantation.
Proposed schedule of prednisone tapering during remission-induction therapy in adults[25]
| Week 1 | 60.0 | Check transaminase levels every week before reducing the prednisone dose: if transaminase levels stop decreasing, add azathioprine 1-2 mg/kg per day, if jaundice is subsiding |
| Week 2 | 50.0 | |
| Week 3 | 40.0 | |
| Week 4 | 30.0 | |
| Week 5 | 25.0 | |
| Week 6 | 20.0 | |
| Week 7 | 15.0 | |
| Week 8-9 | 12.5 | |
| Week 10-11 | 10.0 | |
| If severe steroid side effects: consider reducing to 2.5 mg/d for 2 wk and then stopping prednisone |
Proposed schedule of prednisone tapering during remission-induction therapy in children[2,12]
| Week 1 | 2.0 | Check transaminase levels every week before reducing the prednisone dose: if transaminase levels stop decreasing, add azathioprine starting with 0.5 mg/kg per day, if jaundice is subsiding, at increasing doses up to 2-2.5 mg/kg/d until biochemical control |
| Week 2 | 1.75 | |
| Week 3 | 1.50 | |
| Week 4 | 1.25 | |
| Week 5 | 1.00 | |
| Week 6 | 0.75 | |
| Week 7 | 0.50 | |
| Week 8-9 | 0.25 | |
| Week 10-11 | 0.10-0.20 | |
| If severe steroid side effects: consider reducing to 2.5 mg/d for 2 wk and then stopping prednisone |
Published data on autoimmune hepatitis treatment different from steroids and azathioprine in adults (from age 16)
| Budesonide | |||||||
| Danielsson et al[ | Sweden | 13 naïve | Prospective | Significant decrase of mean transaminase levels | 9 mo | 6-8 mg/d | Plasma cortisol reduction in cirrhotic patients |
| Czaja et al[ | United States | 10 AZA-NR | Prospective | 3/10 BR | 2-12 mo | 9 mg/d | All patients had side-effects |
| Wiegand et al[ | Germany | 12 naïve | Prospective | 10/12 BR | 3 mo | 9 mg/d | 3 discontinued due to side effects |
| Csepregi et al[ | Germany | 10 naïve 8 AZA-NR | Prospective | 7/10 naïve BR 8/8 AZA-NR BR | 24 wk | 9 mg/d | Steroids side-effects in cirrhotic patients |
| Zandieh et al[ | Canada | 6 AZA-INT 3 PDN-INT | Retrospective | 4/6 AZA-INT CBR 3/3 PDN-INT CBR | 24 wk-8 yr | 1.5-9 mg/d | Not reported |
| Manns et al[ | Europe | 208 naïve or relapsing | Prospective, randomized, | 60% BR in budesonide 39% BR in PDN | 6 mo | 9 mg/d | Steroids side effects: 28% in budesonide arm, 53% in PDN arm |
| Mycophenolate mofetil | |||||||
| Richardson et al[ | United Kingdom | 3 AZA-INT 4 AZA-NR | Retrospective | 5/7 BR | 46 mo | 2 g/d | Leukopaenia in 1 |
| Zolfino et al[ | United Kingdom | 3 second line | Retrospective | 1/3 BR | Not reported | 2 g/d | Not reported |
| Devlin et al[ | Canada | 5 second-line | Retrospective | 5/5 BR | Not reported | Not reported | 1 pyelonephritis |
| Chatur et al[ | Canada | 11 second-line | Retrospective | 7/11 BR | 10-54 mo | 0.5-2 g/d | Leukopaenia in 1, diarrhoea in 1 |
| Czaja et al[ | United States | 8 first- and second line | Retrospective | 0/8 CBR | 12-26 mo | 0.5-3 g/ d | None reported |
| Inductivo-Yu et al[ | United States | 15 second-line | Retrospective | Significant decrease of mean transaminase levels and of histological fibrosis and inflammation | 41 mo | 2 g/d | None significant |
| Hlivko et al[ | United States | 17 naïve 12 second-line | Retrospective | 16/19 BR | Not reported | 0.5-2 g/d | 10 discontinued for side-effects |
| Hennes et al[ | Germany | 27 AZA-INT 9 AZA-NR | Retrospective | 57% AZA-INT BR 25% AZA-NR BR | 16 mo | 1-2 g/d | 11 GI side effects |
| Wolf et al[ | United States | 16 second-line | Retrospective | 5/16 BR | Not reported | 1-2 g/d | 1 discontinued due to paresthesias |
| Sharzehi et al[ | United States | 9 AZA-INT 12 AZA-NR | Retrospective | 21/21 BR | 12 mo | 0.5-2 g/d | 1 discontinued for GI side-effects |
| Baven-Pronk et al[ | The Netherlands | 23 AZA-INT 22 AZA-NR | Retrospective | 67% AZA-INT BR 13% AZA-NR BR | 3-133 mo | 0.5-3 g/d | 6 discontinued for side-effects |
| Jothinami et al[ | India- United Kingdom | 18 AZA-INT 2 AZA-NR | Retrospective | 14 BR | 5-83 mo | 1-2 g/d | 3 discontinued due to side-effects |
| Zachou et al[ | Greece | 109 naïve | Prospective | 83/102 BR at 3 mo | 72 mo | 1.5-2 g/d | 2 discontinued for septicaemia; 5 dose reduction for leukopaenia or infections |
| Gazzola et al[ | Australia | 51 AZA-INT 45 AZA-NR | Retrospective | 27/49 AZA-INT BR 17/40 AZA-NR BR | Median: 31.9 mo | 1-2 g/d | 1 death, 2 hospitalisations, 8 GI side effects, 5 infections, 3 cytopoenia, 3 neuropsychiatric, 2 skin cancer, 1 lymphoproliferative disorder |
| Park et al[ | South Korea | 1 AZA-INT | Retrospective | 1/1 CBR | 1 yr | 1 g/d | None |
| Cyclosporine A | |||||||
| Mistilis et al[ | Australia | 1 AZA-INT | Retrospective | 1/1 BR | 1 yr | Not reported | None |
| Paroli et al[ | Italy | 3 naïve | Prospective | 3/3 BR | 1 yr | 5 mg/kg/d | Not reported |
| Person et al[ | United States | 1 second-line | Retrospective | BR | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported |
| Sherman et al[ | United States | 6 AZA-NR (1 paediatric) | Retrospective | 5/6 BR at 10 wk | Not reported | Not reported | 1 increased serum creatinine |
| Senturk et al[ | India | 1 second-line | Retrospective | BR | 1 yr | Not reported | None |
| Fernandes et al[ | United States | 5 AZA-NR | Retrospective | 4/5 BR at 3 mo | 27 mo | 3-5 mg/kg/d | Minimal |
| Malekzadeh et al[ | Iran | 9 naïve 10 second-line | Prospective | 79% BR and HI | 26 mo | 2-5 mg/kg/d | 4 discontinued due to side effects |
| Zolfino et al[ | United Kingdom | 1 second-line | Retrospective | NR | Not reported | Serum level 100-200 μg/L | Not reported |
| Malekzadeh et al[ | Iran | 22 steroid-intolerant or NR | Retrospective | 9 BR | 60 mo | Not reported | Hirsutism (frequency not reported) |
| Tacrolimus | |||||||
| Van Thiel et al[ | United States | 21 naïve | Prospective | Mean 80% ALT drop at 3 months | 3 mo | 6.6-8 mg/d; blood levels 0.6-1.0 ng/mL | Mild mean creatinine elevation after 1 yr |
| Heneghan et al[ | United Kingdom | 7 naïve | Prospective | BR in 86% | Not reported | Not reported | |
| Zolfino et al[ | United Kingdom | 5 AZA-NR | Retrospective | 2/5 BR | Not reported | 2-4 mg/d | Not reported |
| Aqel et al[ | United States | 11 second-line | Retrospective | Normalization of mean ALT value | 16 mo | 0.5-1 mg/d(blood level < 6 ng/mL) | Minimal |
| Chatur et al[ | Canada | 3 second-line | Retrospective | 3/3 NR | 10-54 mo | 2-4 mg/d | 1 discontinued for abdominal pain |
| Larsen et al[ | Denmark | 9 AZA- or MMF-NR (1 pediatric) | Retrospective | 9/9 BR | 12-37 mo | 2 mg/d (target blood level < 6 ng/mL) | 1 mild tremor |
| Tannous et al[ | United States | 13 second-line | Retrospective | 12/13 BR | 1-65 mo | 2-6 mg/d (mean blood level 6 ng/mL) | 1 HUS; 1 oral carcinoma |
| Than et al[ | German, United Kingdom | 16 AZA-NR 1 AZA-INT | Retrospective | BR in most | 60 mo | 0.5-5 mg/d | 1 LT; 4 PSC overlap |
| Al Taii et al[ | United States | 23 second-line | Retrospective | 27% CBR 41% BR | 5 mg/d (mean) serum level: 6.7 ng/mL (mean) | Significant increase of serum creatinine; 1 discontinued for GI hemorrhage | |
| Sirolimus | |||||||
| Chatrath et al[ | United States | 5 AZA-NR | Prospective | 4/5 BR | 4-72 mo | 2 mg/d | 2 hyperlipidemia |
| Rubin et al[ | United States | 2 second-line | Retrospective | 1/2 BR | Not reported | 3-6 mg/d | 1 discontinued due to leg ulcer |
| Everolimus | |||||||
| Ytting et al[ | Denmark | 7 second-line | Retrospective | 3/7 CBR 4/7 BR | 1-3 yr | 0.75-1.5 mg/d (target blood levels: 3-6 ng/mL) | Minimal |
| Rituximab | |||||||
| Burak et al[ | Canada | 3 AZA-NR 3 AZA-INT | Prospective | 6/6 BR at 24 wk | 72 wk | 1000 mg on day 0 and 15 | 1 mild infection |
| Al-Busafi et al[ | Oman | 1 steroid-resisitant | Retrospective | BR | Not reported | Not reported | None reported |
| Rubin et al[ | United States | 1 second-line | Retrospective | 1/1 BR | 14 mo | 475 mg/m | None reported |
| Infliximab | |||||||
| Weiler-Normann et al[ | Germany | 11 second-line | Retrospective | 8/11 BR | 6 to > 40 infusions | 5 mg/kg on 0, 2, 6, then every 4-8 wk | 7/11 infections, 3 discontinued for side effects |
| Vallejo et al[ | Spain | 1 AZA-NR | Retrospective | 1/1 BR | 3 mo | 5 mg/kg given 3 times | Mild respiratory infection |
| 6-mercaptopurine | |||||||
| Pratt et al[ | United States | 2 AZA-INT | Retrospective | 2/2 CBR, 1/2 HI | 24 mo in one not reported in the other | 100 mg/d | None reported |
| Hübener et al[ | Germany/United Kingdom | 20 AZA-INT 2 AZA-NR | Retrospective | 8/20 CBR 7/20 BR | 18.5 mo | 25-100 mg/d | 4 discontinued for GI side-effects, 1 for leucopaenia |
| Elnegouly et al[ | Germany/Austria | 17 AZA-INT | Retrospective | 11/12 CBR | 1 yr | 25-50 mg/d | 2 discontinued for side-effects |
| Allopurinol | |||||||
| Al-Shamma et al[ | United Kingdom | 1 AZA-NR | Retrospective | 1/1 BR | 12 mo | 100 mg/d | None reported |
| De Boer et al[ | The Netherlands | 3 AZA-INT 5 AZA-NR | Retrospective | 7/8 BR | 13 mo | 100 mg/d | 1 discontinued for neuropathy |
| Al-Shamma et al[ | United Kingdom | 1 AZA-NR | Retrospective | 1/1 CBR | Not reported | 100 mg/d | None reported |
| 6-thioguanine | |||||||
| De Boer et al[ | The Netherlands | 3 AZA-INT | Retrospective | 3/3 BR | Not reported | 0.3 mg/kg/d | None reported |
| Van den Brand et al[ | The Netherlands | 6 AZA-NR 6 AZA-INT | Retrospective | Significant median ALT decrease | 12-75 mo | 0.3 mg/kg/d | 1 nodular regenerative hyperplasia |
The series includes 46 children (Woynarowski et al[91] 2013);
The series includes 4 adolescents, but only overall results are reported, and youngest age at diagnosis was 13 yr;
The series includes 6 adolescents, but only overall results are reported, and youngest age at diagnosis was 15 yr. BR: Biochemical response; AZA-NR: Azathioprine non-responder; AZA-INT: Azathioprine intolerant; CBR: Complete biochemical response; PDN: Prednisone; GI: Gastrointestinal; HI: Histological improvement; LT: Liver transplant; NR: Non-responder; ALT: Alanine aminotransferase; HUS: Haemolytic-uremic syndrome; PSC: Primary sclerosing cholangitis.
Published data on autoimmune hepatitis treatment different from steroids and azathioprine in children
| Budesonide | |||||||
| Woynarowski et al[ | Europe | 46 including naïve and second-line | Prospective | 16% BR AZA+BUD 15% BR AZA+PDN at 6 mo | 1 yr | 6-9 mg/d | More weight gain in PDN group |
| Mycophenolate mofetil | |||||||
| Lee et al[ | Malaysia | 2 second-line | Retrospective | 0/2 BR at 6 mo | 6-18 mo | 20-40 mg/kg/d | Not reported |
| Aw et al[ | United Kingdom | 20 AZA-NR 6 AZA-INT | Retrospective | 18/26 CBR | 0.75-12 mo | 20-40 mg/kg/d | 7 Leukopaenia |
| Jiménenz-Rivera et al[ | Canada | 12 second-line | Retrospective | Not reported | Not reported | 1000-1500 mg/d | Not reported |
| Dehghani et al[ | Iran | 5 second-line | Retrospective | 5/5 BR | None reported | Not reported | Not reported |
| Cyclosporine A | |||||||
| Jackson et al[ | South Africa | 1 AZA-INT | Retrospective | 1/1 BR at 2 wk | 19 mo | 5 mg/kg/d | None |
| Debray et al[ | France | 8 naïve 7 second-line (all type 2 AIH) | Retrospective | 8/8 naïve BR 7/7 second-line (including 3 with ALF) | 1-6 yr | 4.7-5.6 mg/kg/d | Minimal |
| Ben Halima | Tunisia | 1 first-line | Retrospective | 1/1 BR | Not reported | Not reported | None |
| Sciveres et al[ | Italy | 4 naïve 4 steroid/AZA-intolerant | Retrospective | 8/8 BR at 2-8 wk | 1.5-15 yr | 4-10 mg/kg per day | 2 gingival hypertrophy, 1 creatinine elevation |
| Cuarterolo et al[ | Agentina | 86 naïve, type 1 AIH | Prospective | BR 94% | 2 yr | 4 mg/kg per day | 8/84 creatinine elevation 3/84 hypertension |
| Nastasio et al[ | Italy | 19 naïve | Retrospective | 19/19 naïve BR at 4-18 wk 9/10 second-line BR | 6.5 yr | Not reported | 11 hyperthricosis, 13 gingival hypertrophy |
| Dehghani et al[ | Iran | 3 second-line | Retrospective | 3/3 BR | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported |
| Lee et al[ | Malaysia | 2 second-line | Retrospective | 1 /2 BR | 6-18 mo | 5 mg/kg per day, serum level 250-350 ng/mL | |
| Zaya et al[ | Croatia | 9 naïve (1 type 2 AIH) | Retrospective | 7/9 BR after 1 yr | 24 mo | 3-5 mg/kg per day | Minor |
| Jiménez-Rivera et al[ | Canada | 9 naïve 15 second-line | Retrospective | Not reported | 4 ± 2 yr | 4 ± 0.8 mg/kg per day intially 4.9 ± 1.8 mg/kg per day in follow-up | Not reported |
| Tacrolimus | |||||||
| Zolfino et al[ | United Kingdom | 1 second-line | Retrospective | NR | Not reported | 2 mg/d | Not reported |
| Marlaka et al[ | Sweden | 20 naïve | Prospective | 3/20 BR in monotherapy | 1 yr | Target blood levels: 2.5-5 ng/ml | 1 discontinued for side-effects; 2 developed IBD |
| Dehghani et al[ | Iran | 2 second-line | Retrospective | 2/2 BR | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported |
| Jiménez-Rivera et al[ | Canada | 6 second-line | Retrospective | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported |
| Sirolimus | |||||||
| Kurowski et al[ | United States | 4 second-line | Retrospective | 2/4 BR | Not reported | Not reported | 2 mo ulcers |
| Rituximab | |||||||
| D’Agostino et al[ | Canada/Argentina | 2 second-line | Retrospective | 2/2 CBR at 3/8 mo | 26-38 mo | 375 mg/m2 weekly for 4 wk | None reported |
| Infliximab | |||||||
| Rajanayagam et al[ | Australia | 1 second-line | Retrospective | 1/1 BR | 19 mo | 5 mg/kg 4 infusions at 4 wk interval | LT was not prevented |
| 6-mercaptopurine | |||||||
| Pratt et al[ | United States | 1 AZA-NR | Retrospective | 1/1 CBR and HR | 36 mo | 1.5 mg/kg | None reported |
Twelve patients had additional concomintant immunosuppressive drugs. BR: Biochemical response; AZA: Azathioprine; BUD: Budesonide; PDN: Prednisone; INT: Intolerant; NR: Non-responder; AIH: Autoimmune hepatitis; ALF: Acute liver failure; IBD: Inflammatory bowel disease; LT: Liver transplant; CRB: Complete biochemical response.
Figure 2Simplified representation of the thiopurine metabolism. Azathioprine is non-enzymatically converted to 6-mercaptopurine, which is competitively converted into 6-methymercaptopurine, 6-thiouric acid and 6-thiosine 5’-monophosphate by different enzymes. The latter metabolite is further transformed into the metabolic active 6-thioguanine nucleotides.