| Literature DB >> 35070006 |
Vignesh Vinayagamoorthy1, Anshu Srivastava2, Moinak Sen Sarma1.
Abstract
Progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis (PFIC) is a heterogeneous group of disorders characterized by defects in bile secretion and presentation with intrahepatic cholestasis in infancy or childhood. The most common types include PFIC 1 (deficiency of FIC1 protein, ATP8B1 gene mutation), PFIC 2 (bile salt export pump deficiency, ABCB11 gene mutation), and PFIC 3 (multidrug resistance protein-3 deficiency, ABCB4 gene mutation). Mutational analysis of subjects with normal gamma-glutamyl transferase cholestasis of unknown etiology has led to the identification of newer variants of PFIC, known as PFIC 4, 5, and MYO5B related (sometimes known as PFIC 6). PFIC 4 is caused by the loss of function of tight junction protein 2 (TJP2) and PFIC 5 is due to NR1H4 mutation causing Farnesoid X receptor deficiency. MYO5B gene mutation causes microvillous inclusion disease (MVID) and is also associated with isolated cholestasis. Children with TJP2 related cholestasis (PFIC-4) have a variable spectrum of presentation. Some have a self-limiting disease, while others have progressive liver disease with an increased risk of hepatocellular carcinoma. Hence, frequent surveillance for hepatocellular carcinoma is recommended from infancy. PFIC-5 patients usually have rapidly progressive liver disease with early onset coagulopathy, high alpha-fetoprotein and ultimately require a liver transplant. Subjects with MYO5 B-related disease can present with isolated cholestasis or cholestasis with intractable diarrhea (MVID). These children are at risk of worsening cholestasis post intestinal transplant (IT) for MVID, hence combined intestinal and liver transplant or IT with biliary diversion is preferred. Immunohistochemistry can differentiate most of the variants of PFIC but confirmation requires genetic analysis. ©The Author(s) 2021. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Biliary diversion; Hepatocellular carcinoma; Microvillous inclusion disease; Progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis; Tight junction protein
Year: 2021 PMID: 35070006 PMCID: PMC8727216 DOI: 10.4254/wjh.v13.i12.2024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Hepatol
Figure 1Pathogenesis of progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis 1, 2 and 3. Familial intrahepatic cholestasis protein 1 is a flippase that helps in movement of phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylethanolamine from the outer to inner leaflet of the plasma membrane of hepatocyte; Bile salt exporter pump exports bile acid from hepatocytes to bile canaliculus; Multidrug resistance protein 3 is a floppase involved in transporting phosphatidylcholine into bile canaliculus. PFIC: Progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis; FIC1: Familial intrahepatic cholestasis protein 1; BSEP: Bile salt exporter pump; MDR3: Multidrug resistance protein 3.
Figure 2Diagrammatic representation of interaction between various tight junction proteins in hepatocytes. Claudin, tight junction proteins (TJP2), and actin form intercellular cytoskeletal support. Tight junctions prevent mixing of bile and blood. Absence of TJP2 causes a failure of claudin-1 localization at the canalicular membrane, leading to loss of compactness of the tight junctions and leakage of the bile through the paracellular space. TJP2: Tight junction proteins 2.
Figure 3Schematic representation of role of farnesoid X receptor in hepatocyte. Bile acids are transported into the hepatocyte by NTCP. De novo synthesis of bile acids from cholesterol is mediated by CYP7A1. Bile acids and farnesoid X receptor (FXR) interact and enter the nucleus to promote expression of bile salt export protein and short heterodimer partner (SHP). SHP suppresses expression of NTCP and CYP7A1. FXR also induces FGF-19 in ileal enterocytes which inhibits CYP7A1 via FGFR4. ASBT: Apical sodium bile transporter, BSEP: Bile salt export pump; FGF-19: Fibroblast growth factor-19; FGFR-4: Fibroblast growth factor receptor-4; FXR: Farnesoid X receptor; NTCP: Na+-taurocholate co-transporting polypeptide; OST α/β: Organic solute transporter; RXR: Retinoid X receptor; SHP: Short heterodimer partner.
Figure 4Diagrammatic representation of role of MYO5B and RAS-related GTP-binding protein 11A interaction and endosome recycling pathway and bile salt export pump expression. MYO5B and RAS-related GTP-binding protein 11A (RAB11A) interaction is essential for epithelial cell polarization and BSEP localization to the canalicular membrane. Diminished MYO5B/RAB11A recycling endosome pathway leads to disruption of bile salt export pump localization. ABCB11: ATP Binding Cassette Subfamily B Member 11; BSEP: Bile salt export pump; FXR: Farnesoid X receptor; RAB11A: RAS-related GTP-binding protein 11A; RXR: Retinoid X receptor.
Clinical characteristics and outcome in patients with TJP2 mutation
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| Sambrotta | 12 | 1 wk-3 mo | NC-12/12 | Chronic respiratory disease-1, recurrent unexplained hematoma-1 | UDCA, PEBD-2 | 9/12 cases at the age of 1.5-10 yr | Post-transplant-9 (doing well, no disease recurrence); Stable liver disease with PHT-2; Mortality-1 at 13 mo age |
| Zhang | 7 (M = 6, F = 1) | 3 d-2 mo | NC-6/7, pruritus at 7 mo-1/7 | Gallstones 2/7 | Response to UDCA, cholestyramine | None | Resolved cholestasis ( |
| Ge | 1 (F) | 6mo | Jaundice, pruritus, FTT | - | Responded to medical treatment | None | Resolved cholestasis |
| Mirza | 1 (M) | 4 yr | Jaundice, pruritus | - | Medical treatment | None | Cirrhosis, PHT with variceal bleed at 15 yr |
| Wei | Index case (M) with multiple affected family members | 19 yr | Cirrhosis, PHT with variceal bleed, HCC at 22 yr | - | Medical treatment including EVL | 23 yr | Well in post-transplant period |
Variable severity of liver disease: Cholestatic liver disease requiring transplant, cholestatic liver disease and intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy in other affected members.
EVL: Endoscopic variceal ligation; F: Female; FTT: Failure to thrive; HCC: Hepatocellular carcinoma; M: Male; NC: Neonatal cholestasis; PEBD: Partial external biliary diversion; PHT: Portal hypertension; UDCA: Ursodeoxycholic acid.
MYO5B mutation clinical characteristics and outcome
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| Qiu |
| 2 d-19 mo | 1 mo-10 yr | Jaundice and pruritus; No diarrhea | UDCA, cholestyramine | 9-99 | 24-255 | 41-432 | Recurrent-3, persistent-2, transient cholestasis-2, lost to follow-3, listed for LT -1 (died) |
| Cockar |
| - | 6 mo-15 yr | Pruritus with pale stools-6, Jaundice-3; FTT-3; Diarrhea-2, (intractable and settled at 3 yr and 7 yr), gallstone-1 | Antipruritic medications-6; PIBD-1; PIBD followed by PEBD-1; ENBD followed by PEBD-1 | 10-22 | - | 15-177 | 1-LT for poor QOL and pruritus; 5-Partial response with mild pruritus while on medications |
| Gonzales |
| - | 7-15 mo | Pruritus-5; Jaundice-5; Pale stools-5 hepatomegaly-5; Language delay-1 episodes of severe diarrhea before 3 yr of age-1 | UDCA and rifampicin-5; PEBD-1 | 7-11 | 31-170 | 57-207 | Followed till 3.5-13.5 yr of age; Fluctuating cholestasis-4; Cholestasis resolved after 1 mo of PEBD, well till 7 yr of age |
| Girard |
| 3-60 mo | Jaundice, pruritus, hepatomegaly-8; Pre Int Tx-5, post Int Tx-3 | Antipruritic medications-8; PIBD followed by PEBD-1; PIBD-1; PEBD-1; Combined liver and Int Tx-1 | 8-42 | 51-124 | 52-121 | Follow up till 2.8-14 yr of age, remission-6, partial remission-2; Removal of small bowel graft due to acute rejection in 2 cases improved cholestasis | |
AST: Aspartate aminotransferase; ALT: Alanine aminotransferase; ENBD: Endonasal biliary drainage; F: Female; FTT: Failure to thrive; GGT: Gamma glutamyl transferase; Int Tx: Intestinal transplant; LT: Liver transplantation; M: Male; MVID: Microvillus inclusion disease; PEBD: Partial external biliary drainage; PIBD: Partial internal biliary drainage; QOL: Quality of life; UDCA: Ursodeoxycholic acid.
Clinical characteristics and outcome in patients with NR1H4 mutation
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| Gomez-Ospina | All cases had homozygous mutations | ||||||||||
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| F | 2 wk | 20 mo | J, FTT | 53 | 2 | 716 | Cirrhosis | 22 mo | 10 yr | |
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| M | 2 wk | 7 wk | J, FTT | 45 | 2 | 146000 | Fibrosis | 4.4 mo | 15 mo | |
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| F | 6 wk | 6 wk | J | 59 | 1.4 | 13900 | Fibrosis | ND | Died 8 mo | |
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| M | Birth | Birth | J, ascites, pleural effusion, ICB | - | - | Fibrosis | ND | Died at 4 wk | ||
| Himes | Patient 5 and 7 had homozygous mutations | ||||||||||
| Patient 5 | M | 16 mo | 17 mo | J, ascites | 81 | 1.9 | 9610 | Cirrhosis | 20 mo | Alive at 8 yr of age, no graft steatosis | |
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| M | 3 wk | 1 mo | J, FTT, hydrothorax | - | - | - | - | ND | Died at 8 mo, liver failure | |
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| F | 1 wk | 4 mo | J, FTT, hydrothorax | - | - | > 100000 | - | ND | Died at 7 mo, liver failure | |
| Chen | Patient had compound heterozygote mutation | ||||||||||
| Patient 8 | N/A | 3 mo | J, splenomegaly | 3.0 | > 80000 | - | ND | Died at 5 mo | |||
Family 1.
Family 2.
Family 3.
Post transplant both cases have hepatic steatosis and liver function test abnormalities.
AFP: Alpha fetoprotein; BSEP: Bile salt export pump; F: Female; FTT: Failure to thrive; FXR: Farnesoid X receptor; GGT: Gamma-glutamyltransferase; ICB: Intracranial bleed; IHC: Immunohistochemistry; INR: International normalized ratio; J: Jaundice; LTx: Liver transplantation; MDR3: Multidrug resistance protein 3; M: Male; N/A: Not applicable; ND: Not done.
Comparison of clinical features, laboratory profile and outcome in progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis 4, 5 and 6
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| Gene mutation | TJP2/Zona occludens-2 located in 9q21.11 | NR1H4/FXR-located in 12q23.1 | MYO5B located in 18q21.1 |
| Clinical features | |||
| Clinical features | Cholestatic jaundice with pruritus | Rapidly progressive neonatal-onset cholestasis with uncorrectable coagulopathy | Cholestasis with pruritus, with/without transient, recurrent or progressive diarrhea (association with MVID) |
| Extrahepatic features | Neurological and respiratory symptoms | - | - |
| ICP | Yes | Yes (uncommon) | No |
| Laboratory parameters | |||
| AST/ALT | Elevated | Moderate elevation | Mild to moderate elevation |
| GGT | Normal or mild elevation | Normal | Normal |
| Coagulopathy | Late-onset | Early-onset | Late-onset |
| Alpha fetoprotein | Normal, elevated in cases with HCC | Elevated | Normal |
| S. Bile acids | Elevated | Elevated | Elevated |
| Histopathology | |||
| Canalicular cholestasis | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Portal/lobular fibrosis | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Giant-cell transformation | Yes | Diffuse | Sparse |
| Ductular reaction | No | Yes | Yes |
| Hepatocyte necrosis | Yes | - | - |
| Cirrhosis | Yes | Yes | Less common |
| Immunohistochemistry | |||
| BSEP | Present | Absent BSEP staining on bile canaliculus | Abnormally thick, irregular and granular positivity that overflows into subcanalicular area |
| MDR3 | Present | Present | Thickened canalicular staining granular and patchy pattern overflows into subcanalicular area |
| TJP2 | Absent expression in canalicular membrane | Present | Present |
| Claudin1 | Absent or reduced staining on bile canaliculi | Present | Present |
| FXR | Normal | Absent staining on bile canaliculus | Normal |
| MYO5B/RAB11 | Normal | Normal | Intense, granular staining pattern in hepatocyte cytoplasm, and weak/loss of canalicular expression |
| Progression | Rapid | Very rapid | Slow |
| Complications | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Post-transplant graft steatosis similar to PFIC1 | Worsening of cholestasis post intestinal transplant |
| Treatment | |||
| Medical management | UDCA, Rifampicin | Minimal role | UDCA, rifampin, cholestyramine |
| Biliary diversion | PEBD some role | Not tried | Cholestasis subsides after BD in MVID patients with cholestasis |
| Liver transplant | Yes | Yes | Yes. Combined liver intestinal transplant in children with MVID and ongoing cholestasis |
ALT: Alanine aminotransferase; ASBT: Apical sodium-dependent bile acid transporter; AST: Aspartate aminotransferase; BD: Biliary diversion; BSEP: Bile salt export pump; FXR: Farnesoid X receptor; GGT: Gamma-glutamyl transferase; HCC: Hepatocellular carcinoma; MDR3: Multidrug resistance class 3 glyco-protein; ICP: Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy; MVID: Microvillus inclusion disease; MYO5B: Myosin-5b; NBD: Nasobiliary drainage; PEBD: Partial external biliary drainage; PFIC1Progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis-1; RAB11: RAS-related GTP-binding protein-11; TJP2: Tight junction protein-2; UDCA: Ursodeoxycholic acid.