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Cirrhosis Boot Camp Brandon Szeto 5/25/2017 Objectives • Brief introduction to the pathophysiology of cirrhosis • Evaluation of the patient with cirrhosis • Evaluation and management of common complaints in cirrhotic patients • Pre and post liver transplant patients Pathophysiology of Cirrhosis • Spectrum of liver disease from mild/temporary to cirrhosis. • Degree of liver disease can be defined on biopsy based on the METAVIR score, which has two main components: • 1. activity or degree of active inflammation (grade 0-4) • 2. degree of fibrosis (stage 0-4) • Stage 4 (cirrhosis) - pathologic diagnosis with bridging fibrosis and regenerative nodule formation. Etiologies of cirrhosis (in the US) • • • • • Alcohol (aka Laennec’s cirrhosis to the surgeons, 60-70%) Viral hepatitis (10%) – primarily HCV Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease or NAFLD (10-15%) Autoimmune hepatitis (~5%) Metabolic (~5%): Hemochromatosis, A1AT deficiency, Wilson’s disease • Biliary (~5%): primary/secondary biliary cirrhosis, primary sclerosing cholangitis • Vascular: cardiac cirrhosis, Budd-Chiari, SOS History in cirrhotic patients 1. Important to know the underlying etiology of their cirrhosis! 2. Cirrhosis ROS questions which may be more pertinent: diet (to assess sodium intake), medication compliance, recent procedures (ie paracentesis), mental status changes, obvious or occult GI bleeding 3. Also helpful to know if they have ever had any of the common complications of liver disease (variceal bleeding, SBP, etc). 4. Know if your patient follows in the transplant clinic (either pre-transplant and possibly on the transplant list, or posttransplant) and their hepatologist. Non-transplant patient Pre/post transplant patient Physical Exam in cirrhotic patients • V/S: can tend to be slightly hypotensive due to peripheral vasodilation (nitric oxide vs prostacyclin mediated vs ? relative adrenal insufficiency) • Pertinent exam findings • • • • Asterixis Ascites and LE swelling Lung findings Arteriovenous fistulas • Less pertinent (on rounds) but sometimes interesting exam findings: scleral icterus, spider angiomas, Terry’s nails, palmar erythema, gynecomastia, caput medusa Asterixis Thought to be a limited form of myoclonus caused by abnormal balance between agonist/antagonist muscles in the diencephalon. Icterus Ascites Other exam findings in cirrhosis Spider angioma Terry’s nails (proximal nail bed whitening) Caput medusa Laboratory evaluation in cirrhosis • In all cirrhotic patients, the basic lab workup should include a CBC, RFP, LFTs, and coagulation panel (the “MELD labs”). • Common lab findings include: • Leukopenia, anemia, thrombocytopenia – often multifactorial, including splenomegaly and splenic sequestration from portal HTN, nutritional, volume overload • Hyponatremia – often due to volume overload (hypervolemic hyponatremia) • Coagulopathy (elevated INR) – important to also rule underlying nutritional/vitamin K deficiency, and also to remember that these patients are both hypercoagulable and prone to clotting • LFTs can be found in any pattern (ALT/AST can be low in “burned out cirrhosis”) – does not rule in or rule out cirrhosis MELD score • Developed in 2000 at the Mayo clinic and initially used to predict mortality after TIPS. • Now used more broadly as a measure of severity of liver disease, and also an important part of placement on the transplant list. • 3 components: INR, total bilirubin, and creatinine (with an exception for patients on dialysis). • There are a number of ways to get MELD exception points, which come via the local UNOS board, including HCC, hepatopulmonary syndrome, portopulmonary HTN, amyloid disease, and primary hyperoxaluria. • Can also appeal to the local UNOS board for additional exception points for recurrent cholangitis, refractory ascites or encephalopathy or pruritis MELD calculator MELD = 3.78×ln[serum bilirubin (mg/dL)] + 11.2×ln[INR] + 9.57×ln[serum creatinine (mg/dL)] http://www.mayoclinic.org/medical-professionals/model-end-stage-liver-disease/meld-model-unos-modification Child-Pugh-Turcotte Score • More traditional method of predicting mortality in cirrhosis. Case #1: abdominal pain • Patient is a 55 yo M with PMH of ETOH cirrhosis who presents to the ED with new onset abdominal pain for 2 days. It is a diffuse pain and he has felt subjective chills at home. • V/S: 100.1, 100, 95/60, 20, 95% on RA • Exam: notable for abdominal distension, + fluid wave/flank dullness, and diffuse abdominal tenderness • Labs: WBC 15.2, Hgb 12.5, Plt 95. BMP notable for BUN 40, Cr 1.8. LFTs at patient’s baseline. INR 1.4. • Diagnosis? What is your next step? Case #1 cont: • Don’t forget – patients with cirrhosis can have non-cirrhotic causes for abdominal pain too: peptic ulcer disease, ischemic colitis, pancreatitis, C diff or other infectious colitis, etc. • Abdominal exam can be difficult to interpret in the setting of cirrhosis/ascites. Have a low threshold to pursue further workup, whether further lab tests (amylase/lipase, lactate, stool studies) or imaging (generally CT abd/pelvis). Diagnostic paracentesis • Should be strongly considered in all patients with ascites who present to the hospital, regardless or presenting complaint. • Retrospective study looking at patients with presenting complaint of ascites or encephalopathy showed a significant decrease in in-hospital mortality for all patients who received paracentesis on admission (Orman et al, Clin Gastro Hep, 2014). • Tools required: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Sterile gloves 18 or 20 g needle 60 cc syringe with syringe cap Alcohol/chlorhexidine swabs Signed consent +/- ultrasound to locate a suitable pocket for aspiration and avoid major vascular structures 7. +/- lidocaine and a small needle/syringe for local anesthesia 8. +/- senior resident for supervision • A diagnostic paracentesis takes 2 minutes to perform – gathering the materials takes longer than the actual procedure. Do not hesitate to do diagnostic paracentesis, even in the middle of the night - a therapeutic paracentesis can always wait until the morning. Ascites on ultrasound Labs to send with paracentesis • ALWAYS • Cell count • Bacterial culture • SOMETIMES • Albumin • Total protein • Cytology (esp if “bloody tap”) • RARELY • • • • • Glucose Bilirubin (if brown) Amylase Triglycerides (esp if “milky” fluid) Adenosine deaminase and mycobacterial culture Cell count of ascitic fluid • Cell count results are generally reported in WBC, RBC, and WBC differential. • Most important part of diagnosing spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) is a PMN count (ie WBC count * PMN percentage) > 250 and + ascitic cultures for bacteria. • Elevated RBC count in ascites (often from a “traumatic tap”) can skew automated cell count for WBC – generally subtract 1 WBC for every 750 RBC, or 1 PMN for every 250 RBC Management of SBP • Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) – occurs in patients with cirrhosis, and is generally due to translocation of gut bacteria into ascitic fluid • Most common organisms: E coli, Klebsiella, Streptococcus • Should be distinguished from secondary bacterial peritonitis, which is generally shorthand for gut perforation and requires vastly different management (polymicrobial coverage, imaging, and surgical evaluation being key) • Antibiotics: • Cefotaxime (2 g IV q8h) has been most well studied – ceftriaxone (2 g 24h) or other 3rd gen cephalosporins are probably as effective. Total treatment course generally 5 days, longer if poor response. • Other options include fluoroquinolones (avoid if already on FQ for SBP prophylaxis), pip/taz, carbapenems. • Albumin – giving 1.5 g/kg of albumin at time of diagnosis and 1 g/kg of albumin on day 3 after diagnosis was shown to decrease mortality, generally due to lower incidence of renal failure (Sort et al, NEJM 1999). After diagnosis of SBP • Repeat paracentesis – commonly done in our institution at 48h after initial paracentesis to document resolution of infection (decrease in PMN count by >25%), although no evidence that it changes outcomes. • SBP antibiotic prophylaxis • For all patients with prior history of SBP (~70% 1 year recurrence rate) • For patients with ascites total protein < 1.5 and impaired renal function (Cr > 1.2, Na < 130) or liver function (Child Pugh >= B, Tbili > 3.0) • Common regimens include norfloxacin 400 mg daily, TMP/SMX DS 1 tab daily, cipro 750 mg qweek Case #2: GI bleeding • Patient is a 60 yo F with PMH of HCV cirrhosis who presents with a 12 hour history of hematemesis. She started to feel sick, then had a couple episodes of frankly bloody emesis, but none for the last 6 hours. She has never had an EGD before. • V/S: 85/60, 100, 99.0, 18, 93% on RA • Exam: in some distress, no blood in the oral cavity, tachycardic, abdominal fullness without tenderness • Labs: WBC 12.5, Hgb 8.8, Plt 65. BUN 28, Cr 0.9. INR 1.3. • Diagnosis? Additional procedures? Management? GI bleed in cirrhosis • Causes of GI bleeding • • • • • • • • • Esophageal varices Gastric varices or gastric (o)esophageal varices (aka GOV) Portal hypertensive gastropathy (PHG) Gastric antral vascular ectasia (GAVE) Peptic ulcer disease Esophagitis Tumor Dieulafoy lesion And more…! • Initial management is the same as with all GI bleeds – stabilize ABCs (intubation if necessary), fluid and blood resuscitation, reversal of coagulopathy, ICU transfer if needed, GI consult. Medical Management of GI Bleed • Until the patient undergoes EGD, it is difficult to know what is the cause. • Treatment includes: 1. 2. 3. octreotide drip (50 mcg bolus, then 50 mcg/hour x72h or more) to reduce portal hypertension and variceal pressure PPI drip (80 mg bolus, then 8 mg/hr) for treatment of possible PUD. Antibiotics to prevent concurrent infection (7-23% will develop SBP in setting of GI bleed if untreated) – as before, generally 3rd generation cephalosporin or FQ for 5-7 days. Esophageal Varices • Primary method of treatment is rubber banding of the varices, causing thrombosis and obliteration. • Will generally need repeat EGD in 2-4 weeks to eradicate any remaining varices. • Should also be started on non-selective beta blocker (nadolol, propranolol) when clinically able to reduce risk of progression. Gastric Varices • Gastric varices which connect with esophageal varices (gastro(o)esophogeal varices or GOV) are managed similar to esophageal varices • Isolated gastric varices are less prevalent and less well studied than esophageal varices. • Do not respond as well to routine banding – better outcomes with cyanoacrolate injections (“glue injections”) to obliterate varices, which is a procedure only done by select endoscopists. • If unable to glue, next step is TIPS. Rebleeding after treatment • Can be due to ulceration at site of prior banding, or recurrence of prior varices. • May usually attempt repeat endoscopy to try to eradicate any remaining varices – however the next step is often an emergent transhepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) TIPS • Shunt placed by interventional radiology to reduce portal hypertension by redirecting blood from the portal vein to the hepatic vein (and thus the IVC). • Goal is to reduce the portal pressure gradient between portal and hepatic veins to < 12 mmg Hg. Portal Hypertensive Gastropathy (PHG) • Tends to cause slow mucosal oozing (as opposed to quicker variceal hemorrhage). • Due to increased portal pressures causing friable mucosa. • Generally treated with beta blockers to reduce portal pressure and sometimes PPIs to prevent concurrent ulceration. Consider argon plasma coagulation (APC) for focal involement. TIPS, surgical shunting, and liver transplant are other options. Gastric Antral Vascular Ectasia (GAVE) • Aka “watermelon stomach”. • Unusual vascular overgrowth that is associated with systemic sclerosis and portal HTN. • Tends to also cause slow oozing as opposed to acute hemorrhage. • Can be treated with electrocautery or APC as well. Does NOT seem to respond to methods of reducing portal pressure (ie TIPS). Case #3: Confusion • 45 yo M with history of PSC cirrhosis presents with worsening confusion for the last 3-4 days. Her husband says she has been much more sleepy and isn’t recognizing normal things. She is on the transplant list. • V/S unremarkable • Exam: Generally unremarkable. Oriented to self but not to place. + asterixis. • Further questions in history? What labs or other tests do you want? Hepatic or Portosystemic Encephalopathy • Likely due to a combination of factors – poor clearance of ammonia, impairment of GABA and other neurotransmitters leading to enhanced neural inhibitions • HE can be graded as follows: Grade Manifestations of HE I Mild confusion, sleep disturbances, altered mood II Moderate confusion, lethargy III Stuporous, incoherent, sleeping but arousable IV Comatose +/- posturing Ammonia levels • Ammonia level is checked in the ED and is 40 (ULN < 32). • Ammonia levels are frequently checked in hepatic encephalopathy but are generally not helpful (Ge and Runyon, JAMA 2014). High levels are found in many patients with cirrhosis without encephalopathy, and a low level does not exclude hepatic encephalopathy. Hepatic encephalopathy is a clinical diagnosis in the setting of liver disease – no lab value is diagnostic. • Ammonia does have some prognostic value in acute liver failure in predicting mortality and development of cerebral edema. Causes of HE • As before, patients with cirrhosis are not immune to UTIs or other common causes of AMS. Think about the typical causes of AMS in any patient – infection, drugs, electrolytes, hypercarbia, etc. As with any patient with AMS, they should get CBC and RFP/LFTs, infectious workup, drug screens, +/brain imaging, etc. • Most benzodiazapenes are hepatically metabolized and can cause severe disorientation in cirrhotic patients – preferable to use haloperidol in setting of agitation. Causes of HE related to cirrhosis • Key factors to investigate in your history/physical: • Medication non-compliance or other medications. • Dehydration (often iatrogenic from diuretics) • GI bleed, sometimes occult (do a rectal exam!) • SBP (consider diagnostic para) • Decompensation of existing liver disease (development of HCC, new portal/splenic thrombosis, spontaneous development of extrahepatic shunt – consider getting an US with dopplers). Treatment of Hepatic Encephalopathy • As with all causes of AMS, if an underlying cause is identified, it should be treated. • Treatment specific for cirrhosis include: • Lactulose – generally 30 mL (20 grams), anywhere from q2h to once a day. Instruction should be to titrate to 3-5 soft BM/day. Avoid underdosing or frank watery diarrhea. If patient has an ostomy or rectal tube, can instead aim for 500-750 cc stool output/day. • Some patients cannot tolerate lactulose due to taste – can offer Kristalose (powdered lactulose) which is more expensive but tastes better • Rifaximin – non-absorbable antibiotic, given as 550 mg BID, usually in addition to lactulose Case #4: AKI • 70 yo M with PMH of NAFLD cirrhosis who presented to the hospital with worsening abdominal distension and pain. He underwent paracentesis on day 1 with 7 L of ascites removed. Ascites studies are consistent with SBP. His Cr on admission was 1.1 – now on day 3 it has increased to 2.6. Albumin replacement with paracentesis • For therapeutic paracentesis, the massive fluid shifts involved can lead to decreased renal blood flow. AASLD recommends (IIa recommendation) that for paracentesis with > 5 L fluid removal, giving 6-8 g albumin/L removed. • Don’t forget, for any patient with SBP, 1.5 g/kg of albumin on day 1 and 1 g/kg of albumin on day 3 with any patient with SBP. AKI in Cirrhosis • Hepatorenal syndrome (HRS) – one of many causes of renal failure in cirrhosis. Don’t forget obstruction, ATN, etc! • Thought to be due to splanchnic vasodilation and decreased renal perfusion. Unlikely to be the diagnosis without significant sequelae of portal HTN (ascites, varices, etc). • Type 1 HRS: > 2x increase in Cr from baseline, with Cr > 2.5 over 2 weeks • Type 2 HRS: more indolent course, often characterized by diuretic-refractory ascites • Precipitants of type 1 HRS: infection, GI bleed, paracentesis Diagnosis/Management of HRS • UA tends to be bland. Urine electrolytes are consistent with a sodium-avid state (FENa < 1%). • Note that this looks very similar to a dehydration/prerenal picture – thus, the initial management of suspected HRS is to remove any potential contribution from dehydration. • First step is to stop nephrotoxic medications and give a volume challenge (often 25 g of 25% albumin q6h for a day). Management of HRS • If kidney function does not improve with fluid resuscitation, start the “HRS cocktail”: • Midodrine 10 mg TID (alpha-1 agonist causing renal vasoconstriction - can increase to 15 mg TID based on MAPs) • Octreotide 100 mg SQ TID • Albumin (50-100 g/day in divided doses) • If they are in the ICU, can also start norepinephrine monotherapy to also cause renal vasoconstriction – better outcomes than with the HRS cocktail. • Last ditch efforts if renal function does not improve include TIPS and dialysis – both are more temporizing measures while awaiting liver transplantation. Cirrhosis and Pulmonary Disease • 3 unique complications of pulmonary disease in cirrhosis: 1. Hepatic hydrothorax – pleural effusion in setting of cirrhosis, thought to be due to translocation of ascites through “holes in diaphragm” • Treatment with salt restriction, diuretics, thoracentesis, and consider TIPS – avoid chest tubes 2. Hepatopulmonary syndrome – hypoxia and dyspnea in setting of cirrhosis, due to intrapulmonary shunting from small pulmonary AV fistulas • • Dx is generally with TTE with bubble study and CT angio Tx is with supplemental O2 – can also obtain MELD exception points 3. Portopulmonary HTN – combination of portal HTN and pulmonary HTN in setting of cirrhosis • Treatment is similar to that for idiopathic pulm HTN Pre-Transplant • MELD > 25 should be going to transplant surgery service or have a transplant surgery consult. • “Transplant workup” - ABO blood type and Screen x2 - CXR - ABG - EKG - Complete Metabolic Panel, Magnesium, Phosphorus - ECHO - GGT - Dobutamine Stress Test - Ammonia - Ultrasound of the Abdomen with Doppler flow - Alpha Fetoprotein - Obtain records of last colonoscopy - Lipid Panel - PFTs - TSH, T4 - Mammogram and pap smear for females - CBC - PT/INR - Iron Studies (Iron level, TIBC, Transferrin, % sat, ferritin) - Ceruloplasmin - Hep A Ab, - HBsAg (if HBsAg +, then check Hep B DNA quant and HBeAg) - HBsAb - HBcAb - Hep C Ab (HCV genotype and viral load if HCV +) - TPA EIA (RPR) - EBV IgG - CMV IgG - HIV - Quantiferon Gold - UA and culture - PSA (if male >50) - HCG (if female >12) Post-Transplant • “Mercedes” or “Chevron” scar – telltale sign of prior liver transplant, as it allows surgeons access to the liver as well as all the surrounding vascular and luminal structures Post-Transplant • Know the date of transplant and indication for transplant. • Any post-op complications. • Review most recent liver biopsy – need to know if these patients have cirrhosis or not. • Know immunosuppressives and any prophylactic medications • • • • Prednisone Tacrolimus (Prograf) – check a level on admission Mycophenolate Mofetil (Cellcept) Cyclosporine (Neoral or Sandimmune) – check a level on admission • Sirolimus (Rapamycin) • TMP/SMX, valacyclovir, fluconazole for prophylaxis • Don’t be afraid to call the GI fellow on call with questions. • • • • • • • • • • • • • Objectives Pathophysiology Child Pugh MELD Diagnostic/therapeutic paras Ascites TIPS SBP GI bleed - EV, GV, PHG, GAVE HCC PSE Hepatorenal Pulm/cirrhosis - hepatic hydrothorax, portopulmonary HTN, portopulmonary syndrome • PVT • Transplant meds • Post transplant care