Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis (PSC)
British Society of Gastroenterology and UK-PSC guidelines for the diagnosis and management of primary sclerosing cholangitis. Published: Jun 2019.
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
- They sound similar!
| 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 | Imaging is non-diagnostic; biopsy is necessary | MRCP |
| Treatment | Ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) | Limited; liver transplant if advanced |
| Main complication | Osteoporosis, cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma | Cholangiocarcinoma |
Background Information
Definition
PSC is a chronic cholestatic liver disease, characterised by IDIOPATHIC progressive inflammation and destruction of BOTH intrahepatic and extrahepatic bile ducts.
Aetiology
PSC is idiopathic
The strongest association is with IBD, particularly ulcerative colitis [Ref]
- IBD is present in 70-88% of patients with PSC
- 5-10% of IBD patients develop PSC
Clinical Features
Patients often have concomitant ulcerative colitis (also see the Ulcerative Colitis (UC) article)
Patients may be asymptomatic. If symptomatic, mainly due to cholestasis:
- Fatigue
- Pruritus
- Jaundice
- RUQ pain
- Hepatosplenomegaly
- Features of cirrhosis seen in advanced disease (see the Cirrhosis article for more information)
PSC can lead to ascending cholangitis. See the Ascending Cholangitis article for more information.
Complications
Major complications: [Ref]
- Cholangiocarcinoma (400x risk compared to the general population)
- Cirrhosis
- Gallbladder cancer
- Colorectal cancer (esp. in those with concomitant IBD )
- Complications from chronic cholestasis
- Fat-soluble vitamin (A D E K) deficiency
- Osteoporosis
Diagnosis
Diagnostic criteria:
- Cholestatic LFTs, and
- Typical imaging findings, and
- Exclusion of secondary causes of sclerosing cholangitis
Blood Tests
| LFTs | Cholestatic LFTs:
|
| Serology | There is NO diagnostic serological marker for PSC
|
Serum IgG4 level should be checked to assess for IgG4-related disease (which is a secondary cause of sclerosing cholangitis).
Imaging
Initial imaging: abdominal ultrasound
- To rule out common causes of biliary obstruction
- But it is NOT used to diagnose PSC
1st line (and gold standard) diagnostic imaging: MRCP
- Classic beaded appearance from multifocal strictures and segmental dilatation of intra- and extra-hepatic bile ducts
Liver Biopsy
Liver biopsy is NOT routinely done, and is NOT necessary for diagnosis (see diagnostic criteria above)
Liver biopsy is only considered if:
- Imaging is normal, but clinical suspicion of PSC remains
- There is suspicion of overlap with autoimmune hepatitis
- Diagnostic uncertainty
Biopsy can demonstrate “onion skin” periductal fibrosis (rarely seen) and other features, but is usually non-specific.
Management
Pharmacological Management
Disease-Modifying Therapy
There is currently NO recommended disease-modifying therapy for PSC
- Ursodeoxycholic acid is NOT recommended (it is used for PBC)
- Corticosteroids and immunosuppressants are NOT recommended
Symptom-Directed Therapy
| Pruritus |
|
| Fatigue |
|
Interventional Treatment
ERCP should NOT be routinely offered to patients with PSC
ERCP (balloon dilatation preferred over stenting) is indicated to treat dominant strictures (symptomatic / worsening liver biochemistry)
- Empirical antibiotic prophylaxis should be given as PSC patients undergoing ERCP are at risk of post-ERCP cholangitis
Liver Transplantation
Liver transplantation is the only curative treatment for PSC
Liver transplant should be considered in those with advanced liver disease:
- Cirrhosis
- Portal hypertension
- Decompensated liver failure
- Recurrent / intractable bacterial cholangitis
- Severe pruritus
- Complicated biliary strictures
Cholangiocarcinoma is generally a contraindication to liver transplantation, due to poor outcomes and high recurrence rates
Monitoring
All patients at diagnosis of PSC should be screened for IBD with colonoscopy
- NB those with IBD require annual colonoscopic surveillance for colorectal cancer
Life-long disease monitoring for progression is necessary:
- Annual LFTs (at minimum)
- Non-invasive imaging to be performed for new / changing symptoms or evolving laboratory abnormalities
Recommended complication surveillance:
- Annual abdominal ultrasound (to screen for gallbladder cancer)
- Bone mineral density measurement (DEXA) (to screen for osteoporosis)
- 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