| Literature DB >> 34733946 |
Shannon M Schroeder1, Karen E Matsukuma2, Valentina Medici3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The goal of the present work is to provide an overview of the differential diagnosis of Wilson disease.Entities:
Keywords: Wilson disease (WD); copper; diagnosis; fatty liver; histology
Year: 2021 PMID: 34733946 PMCID: PMC8506558 DOI: 10.21037/atm-21-2264
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Transl Med ISSN: 2305-5839
Summary of studies applying the Leipzig score criteria
| Ref. No. | Population and study design | Main findings | Laboratory cutoffs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Koppikar, 2005, United Kingdom ( | Retrospective cohort study of 142 children with liver disease investigated for WD in the differential diagnosis, or screened after an index case of WD in the family | • 53 of 54 WD had a score ≥4 | • Liver copper >250 mg % dry weight |
| • 3 patients in the non-WD group had a score ≥4 | • Serum ceruloplasmin <20 g/L | ||
| • Sensitivity 98.14% | • Urine copper (pre-penicillamine) >1 mmol/24 h, post-penicillamine 425 mmol/24 h | ||
| • Specificity 96.59% | |||
| • PPV 94.64% | |||
| • NPV 98.83% | |||
| Moores, 2012, Canada ( | Retrospective cohort study of 48 adult WD patients in the ambulatory setting | • 44 of 59 patients had a LS ≥4 | • Ceruloplasmin <0.20 g/L |
| • Median LS in neurological presenting patients was 8, which was significantly higher (P=0.002) compared with those with hepatic presentation (median 5) and asymptomatic presentation (median 6) | • Urinary copper >0.60 μmol/L | ||
| • Serum copper <11.3 μmol/L | |||
| • 81% of patients had serum copper values below the LLN | • Hepatic copper >0.80 μmol/g | ||
| Penon-Portmann, 2019, Costa Rica ( | Retrospective cohort study of 140 pediatric WD patients with molecular ATP7B testing between 2010 and 2015 | • 100% sensitivity: A total of 34 pediatric patients, from 28 families, were confirmed to have WD by a score ≥4 points according to the LS | Ceruloplasmin lower normal limit (defined as 0.1 g/L or 28 IU/L) |
| • From the 34 diagnosed patients, 23 were new and 11 had been previously reported | |||
| Xuan, 2007, Canada ( | Prospective study of adult patients with atypical presentations of Wilson Disease (n=3) | • All three of cases showed that the LS provides a useful framework for diagnosis | • 24-hour urine copper >0.6 lmol/24 h |
| • Even without the additional points from positive mutational analysis, all three patients each scored a 6, placing them in the diagnostic range | • Serum ceruloplasmin <0.20 g/L | ||
| • Hepatic copper content <50 lg/g | |||
| Abdel Ghaffar, 2011, Egypt ( | Retrospective cohort study of 77 pediatric Wilson Disease patients from 50 unrelated families | • 73 patients with LS ≥4; only 4 children with LS of less than 4 (two asymptomatic and two hepatic); none of whom did mutational analysis at the time of scoring | • Serum ceruloplasmin <20 mg/dL |
| • The study concludes that the value given to different items in the LS might have to be modified for different ethnic groups | • 24-hour urinary copper excretion >100 μg/24 hours or 1,600 μg/24 hours after D-PCA challenge test | ||
| Tatsumi, 2011, Japan ( | Retrospective cohort study of 23 pediatric and adult patients | • 10 patients had definitive ATP7B variants | Ceruloplasmin <10 mg/dL |
| • 9 of these patients had a Leipzig score >4 | |||
| Nicastro, 2010, Italy ( | Case control study of 40 children with WD (26 boys and 14 girls, age range 1.1–20.9 years) and 58 age-matched and sex-matched patients with a liver disease other than WD | • Ceruloplasmin <20 mg/dL showed a sensitivity of 95% and a specificity of 84.5% | • Serum ceruloplasmin <20 mg/dL |
| • Urinary copper >40 lg/24 hours showed a sensitivity of 78.9% and a specificity of 87.9% | • Urinary copper >40 lg/24 hours | ||
| • Urinary copper values after penicillamine challenge did not significantly differ between WD patients and control subjects (sensitivity of 12%) | |||
| • The LS was proved to have positive and negative predictive values of 93% and 91.6%, respectively |
WD, Wilson Disease; LS, Leipzig Score; PPV, positive predictive value; NPV, negative predictive value.
Summary of clinical and laboratory features of WD and conditions in its differential diagnosis
| Disease | Clinical laboratory features |
|---|---|
| Wilson Disease | • Low serum ceruloplasmin (<0.1 g/L) |
| • High urinary copper (>40 μg/day or >0.6 μmol/day) | |
| • Elevated transaminases (often AST > ALT) | |
| • Hemolytic anemia | |
| Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease | • ALT or AST are elevated only mildly to moderately in the range of a two- to fivefold elevation |
| • Alkaline phosphatase may be abnormally elevated two- to threefold, in fewer than half of patients | |
| Alcohol-Associated Liver Disease | • Typically have moderately elevated aminotransferases (<500 IU/mL) with AST:ALT ratio of two or greater |
| • Elevated serum bilirubin (greater than 5 mg/dL) | |
| • Gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT) is often elevated | |
| • Anemia with an elevated mean corpuscular volume (MCV) | |
| • Elevated serum iron indices (ferritin and transferrin saturation) and hepatic iron | |
| • IgA levels are increased in chronic ALD. An increased ratio of IgA to IgG is highly suggestive of ALD | |
| Autoimmune Hepatitis | • Acute: Elevations in ALT and AST levels may exceed 10 to 20 times the upper limit of the reference range, and the ratio of alkaline phosphatase to AST (or ALT) is often <1:5, and in some cases is <1:10 |
| • Chronic or with cirrhosis: AST and ALT elevations are less profound, while the ratio of alkaline phosphatase to AST (or ALT) is lower and approaches 1:2 | |
| • ANA titers in the range of 1:80 to 1:100 or greater are regarded as positive in adults | |
| • Anti-smooth muscle antibodies (ASMA) are more specific than ANA for autoimmune hepatitis, particularly when present in titers of 1:80 or more |
AST, aspartate transaminase; ALT, alanine transaminase; ALD, alcoholic liver disease.
Histopathology of Wilson disease and diseases included in its differential diagnosis
| Disease | Steatosis | Inflammation | Mallory Denk Bodies | Nuclei | Necrosis | Cirrhosis | Ultrastructure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wilson Disease | • Prevalent macrovesicular | • Usually scattered throughout the lobule, sometimes predominant in periportal hepatocytes | Often present | • Glycogenated hepatocyte nuclei (early disease) | Focal spotty hepato-cellular necrosis can be seen in early disease | • Usually micronodular or mixed | • Mitochondria: enlargement, separated outer and inner membranes, cristae dilatations |
| • Throughout the hepatic lobule | • Predominantly lymphocytic sometimes portal lymphohistiocytic including foci of interface hepatitis | • Disorganized nucleoplasm | • Occasionally micronodular | • Electron dense lysosomes | |||
| • Is an early manifestation of disease | |||||||
| Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease | • Typically macrovesicular | • Lobular: Mild scattered neutrophilic or mononuclear inflammation | Often present | Glycogenated hepatocyte nuclei can be present | Spotty necrosis (small clusters of small lymphocytes and histiocytes replacing hepatocytes) can be seen | Usually mixed, with micronodular progression to macronodular | Hepatocyte mega-mitochondria may be seen |
| • Zone 3 | • Hepatocellular ballooning | ||||||
| • Mixed micro-vesicular & macrovesicular is associated with more severe NASH | • Perisinusoidal fibrosis | ||||||
| • Lobular perivenular lipogranulomas | |||||||
| • Kupffer cell aggregates | |||||||
| • Fat cysts | |||||||
| • Iron deposition | |||||||
| Alcohol-Associated Liver Disease | • Most common and earliest manifestation | • Lobular: Clusters of PMN’s (“satellitosis”) surrounding MDB-containing hepatocytes | • Common & “typical” in alcoholic hepatitis | No glycogenated nuclei present | Sclerosing hyaline necrosis noted occasionally | • Typically micronodular separated by broad septa | • Proliferation of smooth endoplasmic reticulum |
| • Typically macrovesicular | • Portal: mononuclear or mixed with PMNs and periportal fibrosis | • Not necessarily in ballooned hepatocytes | • Mixed micro and macronodular also seen | • Giant mitochondria have been associated with all types of ALD from fatty liver to cirrhosis. In alcoholic steatosis, they are prognostic of poor outcome | |||
| • Begins in zone 3 & can extend to portal triads | • Portal lipogranulomas are common | • May occur in apoptotic hepatocytes | |||||
| • Typically centrilobular, but can progress to entire lobule | |||||||
| • Steatosis à steatohepatitis w/centrilobular accentuation | |||||||
| Autoimmune hepatitis | Only with concurrent alcoholic or non-alcoholic fatty liver disease | • Plasma cell infiltrates | Uncommon | Uncommon: multi-nucleated giant hepatocytes | Uncommon but centrilobular necrosis can be seen in early or acute disease | • 1/3 of patient present with cirrhosis at time of diagnosis | • Dendritic cells and lymphocytes attach to disrupted liver sinusoidal endothelial cells via pseudopods |
| • Portal & periportal activity is greater than lobular activity | • Typically macronodular | • Kupffer cells and macrophages: increased phagocytic activity and damaged mitochondria, with intense fibrosis | |||||
| • Rosette formation | • Sinusoidal cell cytoplasm: glassy droplet inclusions | ||||||
| • Emperipolesis |
Figure 1Liver histology of Wilson disease, non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, alcoholic steatohepatitis, and autoimmune hepatitis. (A-C) Wilson disease. (A) Glycogenated nuclei, adjacent to a small portal tract. (B) Ballooning degeneration. (C) Striking anisonucleosis of hepatocytes. (D) Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis. Numerous ballooned hepatocytes are present adjacent to the central venule, along with lobular inflammation. (E) Alcoholic steatohepatitis. Prominent Mallory-Denk bodies (arrow) are present, as well as discrete foci of lobular injury and cholestasis. (F) Autoimmune hepatitis. Prominent portal inflammation consisting predominantly of lymphocytes and plasma cells, with rare eosinophils and neutrophils. Inflammation extends into the lobule (i.e., interface activity). A rare acidophil body is noted (top right). Sections are stained with hematoxylin and eosin. Scale bar length is 50 µm in all quadrants, one size for quadrants A-E, different size for quadrant F. All images were digitally scanned at 20x magnification.