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Primary Biliary Cholangitis (PBC)

BSG and UKPBC primary biliary cholangitis treatment and management guidelines

Overview Table

Primary Biliary Cholangitis (PBC) vs Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis (PSC)

Note that PBC and PSC are 2 distinct conditions, but they share several important similarities. It’s therefore essential to be able to differentiate between them:

  • Both cause chronic cholestatic liver disease
  • Both involve pathological injury to the biliary tree
Feature PBC PSC
Site of disease Intrahepatic bile ducts Intra- AND extrahepatic bile ducts
Association Autoimmune diseases Ulcerative colitis
Antibodies AMA +ve p-ANCA positive (non-specific)
Diagnosis Cholestatic LFT + antibodies +/- liver biopsy MRCP
Treatment Ursodeoxycholic acid Limited treatment
Main complication Osteoporosis, cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma Cholangiocarcinoma

Background Information

Definition

PBC is a chronic, progressive cholestatic liver disease, characterised by autoimmune destruction of the intrahepatic bile ducts

Risk Factors

PBC is associated with both genetic and environmental factors: [Ref]

Genetic susceptibility
  • Family history (significant risk factor)
  • HLA class II alleles (e.g. HLA-DRB1, HLA-DQA2)
  • Non-HLA loci (e.g. IL-12A, IL-12RB2, CCL20)
Environmental triggers
  • Smoking
  • UTIs (esp. E. coli)
  • Exposure to nail polish, hair dyes, and certain cosmetics
  • Prior tonsillectomy

PBC is often associated with other autoimmune conditions:

  • Sjogren’s syndrome (one of the most common autoimmune associations) [Ref]
    • Both PBC and Sjogren’s syndrome commonly present with sicca symptoms
  • Coeliac disease
  • Autoimmune thyroid disease
  • Systemic sclerosis or CREST syndrome
  • Rheumatoid arthritis

Complications

Key complications: [Ref]

  • Dyslipidaemia (esp. hypercholesterolaemia) and metabolic syndrome (up to ~80% patients)
    • Interestingly, the dyslipidaemia alone does NOT increase the risk of cardiovascular disease
  • Complications from chronic cholestasis
    • Fat-soluble vitamin (A D E K) deficiency
    • Osteoporosis
  • Liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma

Diagnosis

A classic mnemonic to remember the key features of PBC is the “Ms”:

  • Middle-aged
  • Male sparing (i.e. females)
  • AIgM +ve

Clinical Features

Most cases occur in middle-aged women (40-70 y/o)

 

Key presenting features: [Ref1][Ref2]

Early-stage disease 50% patients are asymptomatic at diagnosis (often detected by ↑ ALP or during autoimmune screen)

 

If symptomatic:

  • Fatigue (most common symptom)
  • Pruritus (often causing excoriation marks)
  • Sicca symptoms (dry eyes/ mouth, vaginal dryness)
  • Raynaud’s phenomenon
Late-stage disease
  • Features of significant cholestasis
    • Jaundice
    • Pale stools and dark urine
  • Signs of portal hypertension (e.g. splenomegaly, ascites, oesophageal varices) and hepatic decompensation

In PBC, features of overt cholestasis (e.g. jaundice, pale stools, dark urine) usually occur only in the later stages of disease.

In contrast, pruritus often presents early, as it is mediated by specific cholestatic pruritogens (such as lysophosphatidic acid and autotaxin) rather than by bile acid accumulation alone.

Investigation and Diagnosis

Diagnostic criteria (at least 2 out of 3 of the following components): [Ref]

Component Diagnostic criteria Other typical findings (but not part of the diagnostic criteria)
Cholestatic LFTs
  • Persistent ↑ ALP

 

  • Cholestatic LFTs (↑ ALP and GGT with relatively normal AST and ALT) – seen in early disease
  • ↑ Bilirubin (conjugated hyperbilirubinaemia) is seen in more advanced disease (indicate worse prognosis)
Characteristic serology
  • AMA +ve, or
    • 1st line antibody tested (highest sensitivity)

 

  • PBC-specific ANA (anti-sp100 or anti-gp210) +ve
  • ↑ IgM (non-specific, thus not part of the criteria)
Liver biopsy (definitive test) Non-suppurative destructive cholangitis affecting small intrahepatic bile ducts (esp. interlobular and septal ducts)

  • Hallmark florid duct lesion (dense lymphocytic infiltration surrounding and infiltrating damaged bile ducts)
  • Ductopaenia (bile duct loss)

Imaging should be routinely offered

  • 1st line: abdominal ultrasound
    • However, imaging has no role in helping diagnose PBC (it is often normal in PBC as the pathology is in the intrahepatic ducts)
    • Its role is mainly to exclude differential diagnoses or detect cirrhosis

The presence of cholestatic LFTscharacteristic serology is sufficient to diagnose PBC. (Remember the diagnostic criteria are 2 out of 3).

Therefore, liver biopsy is not routinely required to diagnose PBC. But it should be considered when serology is negative, findings are atypical, or coexisting liver pathology (e.g. autoimmune hepatitis overlap).

Exam Tip

If asked for the most appropriate first-line investigation for suspected primary biliary cholangitis, antimitochondrial antibody (AMA) serology should be chosen unless imaging is specifically requested.

AMA is highly sensitive and specific and forms part of the diagnostic criteria, particularly with a cholestatic LFT pattern (raised ALP). Ultrasound is not diagnostic for PBC and is mainly used to exclude other causes of cholestasis, such as biliary obstruction.

Management

Pharmacological Management

Disease-Modifying Therapy

All patients should be started on ursodeoxycholic acid for life (improves transplant-free survival and delays progression to cirrhosis)

 

2nd line agents (if non-responders to ursodeoxycholic acid)

  • Obeticholic acid (semi-bile acid analogue)

 

Fibrates and budesonide are off-label therapies.

Symptom-Directed Therapy

Pruritus
  • 1st line: cholestyramine (bile acid sequestrant)
  • 2nd line: rifampicin
  • 3rd line options:
    • Naltrexone
    • Sertraline
    • Gabapentin
Fatigue
  • There are currently NO effective pharmacological management
  • Treat direct contributors of fatigue
Sicca syndrome
  • 1st line: artificial tears and saliva substitutes, oral hygiene, vaginal moisturisers
  • 2nd line: oral muscarinic agonist (pilocarpine)

Liver Transplantation

Liver transplantation is the only curative treatment for PBC. However, most patients do NOT require transplantation due to improved outcomes with ursodeoxycholic acid

 

Indications to consider liver transplantation:

  • Bilirubin > 50µmol/L
  • Decompensated liver disease
  • Severe, intractable pruritus

 

Note that recurrence of PBC post-transplant can occur, therefore lifelong monitoring is necessary, even after a transplant

Monitoring

BSG guidelines state that it is reasonable to screen all PBC patients for coeliac disease, thyroid disease, and Sjogren’s syndrome after diagnosis

 

Lifelong monitoring is necessary for PBC: [Ref]

  • LFTs every 3-6 months (to monitor disease progression)
  • Bone mineral density measurement (DEXA) every 2 years
  • Vitamins A, D, E and prothrombin time annually if bilirubin >2.0
  • If the patient develops cirrhosis, screen for complications accordingly
    • Ultrasound +/- AFP every 6 months (for HCC)
    • Upper GI endoscopy at baseline (for oesophageal varices)
    • See the Cirrhosis article for more details

References

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