| Literature DB >> 29543694 |
Binita M Kamath1, Alastair Baker2, Roderick Houwen3, Lora Todorova4, Nanda Kerkar5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIM: Alagille syndrome (ALGS) is an inherited multisystem disorder typically manifesting as cholestasis, and potentially leading to end-stage liver disease and death. The aim of the study was to perform the first systematic review of the epidemiology, natural history, and burden of ALGS with a focus on the liver component.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29543694 PMCID: PMC6110620 DOI: 10.1097/MPG.0000000000001958
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr ISSN: 0277-2116 Impact factor: 2.839
Summary of the clinical characteristics and common clinical features reported in patients with Alagille syndrome
| Clinical characteristics | Clinical features | ||||||||||||
| References | n | Study period | Mortality | LT | PEBD | Cardiac murmur | Other CV complications | PS or PPS | Vertebral anomalies/Butterfly vertebra | Renal abnormalities | Growth Retardation /Failure to thrive | Posterior embryotoxon | Characteristic facies |
| Alagille et al ( | 80 | 1960–1985 | 26% | NR | NR | 85% | 85% | 70% | 87% | 74% | 50% | 89% | 95% |
| Deprettere et al ( | 27 | 1973–1983 | 15% | NR | NR | 96% | 52% | 26% | 33% | NR | 73% | 56% | 70% |
| Emerick et al ( | 92 | 1974–1997 | 17% | 21% | 4% | 97% | 24% | 67% | 51% | 40% | 68% | 78% | 96% |
| Hoffenberg et al ( | 26 | 1983–1994 | 11% | 31% | NR | 96% | NR | 83% | 48% | 19% | NR | 85% | 92% |
| Kamath et al ( | 268 | 1992–2002 | 11% | NR | NR | NR | NR | Yes | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Kamath et al ( | 91 | 1995–2009 | 13%–14% | 100% | 14% | 88% | 23% | NR | NR | 40% | Yes | NR | 86% |
| Kamath et al ( | 466 | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | 39% | NR | NR | NR |
| Lykavieris et al ( | 163 | 1960–2000 | 35% | 27% | NR | NR | 53% | NR | NR | NR | Yes | NR | NR |
| Lykavieris et al | 38 | 1960–2000 | Yes | 37% | NR | 63% | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Narula et al ( | 41 | 1989–2004 | 12% | 15% | NR | NR | 93% | 73% | 24% | NR | 83% | 70% | 98% |
| Nischal et al ( | 20 | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | 95% | NR |
| Quiros-Tejeira et al ( | 43 | 1976–1997/1980–1997 | 28% | 47% | NR | 98% | 2.3% | 86% | 38% | 50% | 86% | 73% | 98% |
| Subramaniam et al ( | 117 | 1980–2005 | NR | NR | NR | 91% | 91% | 72% | 37%–39% | 23% | 51% | 61% | 77% |
*Including congenital heart disease and structural intracardiac disease.
†Growth retardation.
‡PPS only.
§Failure to thrive.
||Overall proportion not reported.
¶Based on 1-year and 5-year survival rates, respectively.
#Patients with liver transplant only included in study.
**Only patients with severe haemorrhagic complications.
ALGS = Alagille syndrome; CHD = congenital heart disease; LT = liver transplantation; n = number of patients with a feature; PEBD = partial external biliary diversion; PPS = peripheral pulmonary stenosis; PS = pulmonary stenosis.
Summary of the hepatic abnormalities and secondary comorbidities reported in patients with Alagille syndrome
| Hepatic abnormalities (n/N [%]) | Secondary comorbidities (n/N [%]) | ||||||||||||
| References | n | Cholestasis | Bile duct paucity | Cirrhosis | Hypercholesterolaemia | Hepato-megaly | Pruritus | Jaundice | Hypertriglyceridaemia | Splenomegaly | Xanthomas | Oesophageal varices | Hepatocellular carcinoma |
| All patients with ALGS | |||||||||||||
| Deprettere et al ( | 27 | 25/27 (93) | 22/27 (81) | NR | 25/27 (93) | 23/27 (85) | 19/27 (70) | 21/27 (78) | 15/21 (71) | 17/27 (63) | 8/27 (30) | NR | NR |
| Emerick et al ( | 92 | 88/92 (96) | 69/81 (85) | 7/27 (26) | “Majority of patients” | 86/92 (93) | 41/92 (45) | 80/92 (87) | “Majority of patients” | 64/92 (70) | 39/92 (42) | NR | 0 |
| Narula et al ( | 41 | 38/41 (93) | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Subramaniam et al ( | 117 | 104/117 (89) | 77/103 (75) | NR | 52/86 (60) | 83/117 (71) | NR | NR | NR | 41/117 (35) | NR | NR | NR |
| Patients with cholestasis only | |||||||||||||
| Hoffenberg et al ( | 26 | 26/26 (100) | 20/25 (80) | NR | 20/24 (83) | NR | 23/26 (88) | NR | NR | NR | 9/24 (38) | NR | 0 |
| Quiros-Tejeira et al ( | 43 | 43/43 (100) | 34/41 (83) | 19/20 (95) | 35/43 (81) | 36/43 (84) | 38/43 (88) | NR | 23/37 (62) | 22/43 (51) | 18/43 (42) | NR | NR |
| Lykavieris et al ( | 163 | 163/163 (100) | NR | 41/94 (44) | NR | 126/163 (77) | 129/160 (81) | 107/163 (66) | NR | 68/161 (42) | 40/163 (25) | 29/82 (35) | 1/163 (<1) |
| Other | |||||||||||||
| Alagille et al | 80 | 73/80 (91) | 80/80 (100) | NR | NR | NR | 62/73 (85) | NR | NR | 30/73 (41) | 22/73 (30) | NR | NR |
| Lykavieris et al | 38 | 33/38 (87) | 32/32 (100) | 10/32 (31) | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | 7/38 (18) | NR |
*Chronic or unspecified.
†Interlobular or unspecified.
‡Only patients with bile duct paucity.
§Only patients with severe haemorrhagic complications.
ALGS = Alagille syndrome; N = number of patients assessed for feature; n = number of patients with a feature; NR = not reported.
Summary of studies exploring pruritus and quality of life in patients with ALGS∗
| References, country | n | Study design | Age | Instruments | Outcomes |
| Abetz-Webb et al ( | 26 children, 20 caregivers | Cross-sectional study | 6 (< 1–35) | Qualitative interviews assessing itching (pruritus) severity and impact on quality of life | Pruritus severity Itching was the most bothersome symptom reported by all patients and caregivers, across all ages Itching severity (based on caregiver reports): severe, 4 (15%); moderate, 8 (31%); mild, 7 (27%); very mild, 7 (27%) Impact on quality of life: skin damage (76% patients; 80% caregivers), difficulty staying asleep (23% patients; 80% caregivers); difficulty falling asleep (54% patients; 55% caregivers), and mood disturbances (54% patients; 65% caregivers). |
| Elisofon et al ( | 71 | Cross-sectional study | 9.4 (5–18) | CHQ-PF50 (parent-reported), ALGS-specific questionnaire, itching/pruritus assessment | CHQ-PF50, mean (SD) score |
| Kamath et al ( | 70 children, 98 parents | Cross-sectional study | Mean | PedsQL 4.0 (parent-reported and child self-reported) | PedsQL Physical Domain, mean (SD) score: |
| Kronsten et al ( | 62 | Retrospective observational review | 7.7 (0.4–18.8) | Pruritus severity | Pruritus severity (at baseline): Mild: 12.9% Moderate: 32.3% Severe: 37.1% Affected quality of life in 19.6% of patients (n = 10) |
| Lind et al ( | 8 children and their parents | Cross-sectional study | 9.2 (6.3–14.5) | PedsQL 4.0 (Dutch version; child self-reported and parent-reported), Infant Dermatitis Scale | PedsQL 4.0 score, mean (SD): |
*Only objectives relevant to the systematic review study questions have been extracted.
†Median (range), years unless specified.
‡Study included normative data from children with JRA or ADHD.
§Values estimated from the bar heights of graphs because numerical values were not reported in the text of the publication.
||P versus ALGS population.
¶ALGS population only, additional populations: PFIC (children, n = 49; parents, n = 68), A1ATD (children, n = 95; parents, n = 123)
#Age of children.
**Children were a mixed population of ALGS/PFIC and had undergone partial external biliary diversion.
††Study included healthy controls.
A1ATD = alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency; ADHD = attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder; ALGS = Alagille syndrome; CHQ-PF50 = Child Health Questionnaire Parent Form 50; HRQoL = health-related quality of life; JRA = juvenile rheumatoid arthritis; NR = not reported; PedsQL = Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory; PFIC = progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis; QoL = quality of life; SD = standard deviation.