Dr Jack Leach Lead doctor Smithfield services Manchester ARCH Initiatives Merseyside General practitioner St Helens and Bolton RCGP colead for alcohol training The liverhealthy or unhealthy ID: 131403
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Slide1
Understanding alcoholic liver disease
Dr Jack Leach
Lead doctor, Smithfield services, Manchester, ARCH Initiatives, Merseyside
General practitioner, St Helens and Bolton
RCGP co-lead for alcohol trainingSlide2
The liver…healthy or unhealthy?Slide3
CT scan of the liver; any abnormality?Slide4
Alcoholic liver disease is a confusing area!
I and I believe many health professionals in the alcohol field find alcoholic liver disease complicated and confusing.
This presentation is an attempt to explain alcoholic liver disease in a simple and practically way.
O
ne reminder and six questions:
R
eminder
; alcohol dependence is neither necessary nor sufficient for alcoholic liver disease. Dependent drinkers do not always have significant liver disease. Alcoholic liver disease may occur in non-dependent drinkers, though it is considerably commoner amongst them. Alcohol may cause acute and chronic toxic effects to the liver. The severity of chronic liver disease is related to the amount and duration of drinking, the patient’s vulnerability to liver damage and any associated liver disease. Slide5
SIX questions:
Why is alcoholic liver disease important?
How do you identify alcoholic liver disease?
How do you assess the severity of liver disease
How can liver
disease
be classified in
a simple and
practical way?
Does stopping or reducing drinking improve chronic liver disease?
What treatment is there for advanced liver disease?Slide6
1. Why is alcoholic liver disease important?
Problem drinking considerably increases risk of premature death (Valliant 1983)
Alcoholic liver disease is a major cause of illness and death worldwide. Disproportionately affecting deprived communities and the young
(
Babor
2003)
In England the commonest recorded cause of death from alcohol related disease is liver disease. Accounts for 2% of all cause deaths (12,000). The death rate has been increasing . 70% of people dying from alcoholic liver disease do so in hospital (National end of life care network 2012, NHSIC 2012)
Alcohol is a major cause of physical, psychological and social illness, reducing quality of life and increasing health service use (
Babor
2003, NHSIC 2012). In 2010 there were 43,100 hospital admissions from alcoholic liver disease
C
hronic alcoholic liver disease has a long and progressive course
A
lcoholic liver disease is potentially preventable and treatable.Slide7
2. How do you identify liver disease?
Sub-clinical liver disease:
Need a high degree of suspicion where there is prolonged and excessive drinking. Vaguely unwell with abnormal liver function tests.
Clinical liver disease:
Unwell with signs of liver cell failure and portal hypertension. Consider other causes of liver disease and co-existing disease (NICE 2010). For example, viral
and drug induced hepatitis, auto-immune hepatitis, liver and biliary tract cancer, biliary tract disease
(e.g. gallstones
) and metabolic diseases such as
haemochromoatosis
, Wilson’s disease and diabetes.Slide8
How severe is this patient’s liver disease?Slide9
3. How do you assess the severity of liver disease?
C
onsider whether the patient has acute on chronic liver disease or chronic liver disease.
Patients with acute liver cell failure are extremely unwell
a
nd need urgent hospital treatment.
The severity of chronic alcoholic liver disease
is assessed by:
Clinical assessment
Liver function tests
Special investigations e.g. ultrasound,
fibroscan
, MRI/CT and liver biopsy
Validated scoring systems have been developed by liver transplant centres to measure the severity of liver disease and corresponding risk of death, such as the Child Pugh and model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) scales.Slide10
a. Clinical assessment
Signs of hepatitis
(inflammation)
Enlarged and tender liver
Signs of liver cell failure
:
Features of excessive oestrogen e.g. spider
naevi
,
gynaecremastia
Failure to metabolise bilirubin; Jaundice
Inadequate metabolism of fats, carbohydrates and protein; loss of weight, muscle wasting
Hypoalbinaemia
; with secondary congestive heart failure
Failure to clear waste products; encephalopathy
Signs of portal hypertension
:
Ascites
Oesophageal
varices
Enlarged spleen
haemorroidsSlide11
b. Liver function tests; how they confuse people!
Measures of inflammation:
Liver cell enzymes (GGT, ALT, CDT)
Measures of liver cell failure; production:
Low serum albumin
Prolonged
prothrombin
time (PT)
Measures of liver cell failure; clearance:
High total serum bilirubin
Measures of
hepato
-renal syndrome and electrolyte disturbance;
Serum electrolytes and creatinineSlide12
4. How can liver disease be classified in a simple and useful way?
Array of confusing terms. For example, fatty liver, alcoholic hepatitis, cirrhosis, compensated and decompensated liver disease.
From a practical purposes I believe useful to classify into three groups:
1. Acute liver failure
Features of liver cell failure, severe acute inflammation with disturbance of portal blood flow.
There is considerable risk of death
May
be provoked by alcohol binge,
detox, acute illness or severe infection
U
nwell within short period (days) with symptoms such as vomiting, confusion, jaundice, abdominal pain and rapid increase in girth from ascites, electrolyte disturbance and risk of
hepato
-renal syndrome. Slide13
2, Mild chronic liver disease
Features of inflammation, liver function maintained
abnormal liver function tests; high liver enzymes (may be very high) but normal serum bilirubin, albumin and
prothrombin
time
Enlarged firm, non-tender liver. Not “ill” and no clinical features of liver disease
3. Severe chronic liver disease
Features of chronic liver cell failure and of disturbing liver architecture from fibrosis (cirrhosis)
Abnormal liver function tests; liver enzymes may be normal but high serum bilirubin, low serum albumin and prolonged
prothrombin
time
Clinical features of liver disease
Matter of urgency to reduce and ideally stop drinking. Advice of
hepatologist
.Slide14
5. What effect does stopping and reducing drinking have on severe liver disease?
S
topping drinking can considerably and quickly improve liver function. This organ has remarkable regenerative ability.
E
ven if a patient can not stop drinking but can reduce their consumption significantly, the decline in liver function may not only reduce but cease or even improve (dose related toxic effect of alcohol). Slide15
Is alcoholic cirrhosis irreversible?
There is a widespread view that established cirrhosis is irreversible. BUT
Alcoholic liver disease is a major reason for liver transplantation internationally (
Abdul-
Wahed
2010
)
Many transplant centres have a requirement of six months or more abstinence from drinking before they will carry out liver transplantation. For severe life threatening acute on chronic liver cell failure, some centres will waiver this condition.
Anecdotal reports from transplant centres have found a significant proportion of patients with end stage liver disease who initially met the criteria for liver transplantation after 6 months of abstinence had significant improvement in liver function, no longer needing liver transplantation.
This suggests that even established end-stage cirrhosis can improve with abstinence, implying that cirrhosis never becomes completely irreversible. Slide16
6. What treatment is there for advanced liver disease?
What can effectively be done to reduce the risk of illness and death from liver disease
i
n addition to reducing and stopping drinking?
Bleeding from oesophageal
varices
; early identification by endoscopy can reduce risk by medical (B blockers) and surgical treatment (banding)
Acute liver failure; general medical support, steroids and emergency liver transplantation can reduce mortality
Acute infections, such as those related to GIT pathogens; treatment of infection and medical support can help
Acute renal, metabolic and electrolyte disturbance such as with
hepato
-renal syndrome; general medical support can help
Chronic liver failure; nutrition support with low protein intake, treatment of ascites (medically with spironolactone, surgical drainage) may help
Acute and chronic liver failure; liver transplantation.Slide17
Survival rates from liver transplantation
A number of case series have been published:
They find end-stage alcoholic liver disease accounts for over 30% of liver transplantations
The five year survival rate after liver transplantation is around 70%
The estimated five year survival rate for those with a comparable stage of liver disease NOT receiving liver transplantation is around 23%.
Abdul
Wahed
2010Slide18
Conclusions
Liver disease is complex and not well understood by many substance misuse professionals
Yet liver disease is a common and important cause of illness and death among problem drinkers.
Liver disease in problem drinkers may be aggravated by or caused by other diseases of the liver apart from alcohol
P
rimary care and substance misuse professionals should have sufficient knowledge and skills to identify and assess alcoholic liver disease
Stopping or reducing drinking improves outcome from alcoholic liver disease, even in advanced/end-stage liver disease
There is effective treatment for advanced alcoholic liver disease and its complications, in addition to stopping/reducing drinking. The two should be tackled together.Slide19
References
Abdul-
Wahed
M (2010). Liver transplantation for alcoholic liver disease. World Journal of Gastroenterology;16(35):4377-4393.
Babor
T et al (2003). Alcohol; no ordinary commodity.
Oxford:Oxford
Medical Publications
.
Morgan
M,
Ritson
B (2010). Alcohol and health. Fifth edition. Medical Council on Alcohol
.
National
end of life care network 2012. Deaths from liver disease; implication for end of life care in England. www.endoflifecare-intelligence.org.uk
.endoflifecare-intelligence.org
.
NICE (2010) CG100. Alcohol use disorders diagnosis and clinical management of alcohol related physical complications.
Vaillant
G (1983). The natural history of alcoholism; causes, patterns and paths to recovery.
Wiesner
et
al (2003). .
Model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) and allocation of donor livers.
Gastroenterology;vol
. 124 (
1):91-106
. Slide20
Copy of slides:
jack.leach@nhs.net