Abstract

Abstract Background Liver disease has emerged as an important cause of cystic fibrosis (CF)-associated morbidity due to recent advancements in management and a resultant increase in life expectancy. Although focal biliary cirrhosis remains the pathognomonic finding in CF, other hepatic manifestations exist but are not as well described, particularly in the pediatric population. Aims Present two rare manifestations of pediatric CF-associated liver disease. Methods In this report, we present a pediatric CF patient with chronic abdominal pain who was found to have hepatolithiasis, cholangitis and secondary sclerosing cholangitis. Results A 12-year-old boy with CF was seen for abdominal pain with functional impairment. He had prior evidence of calculi in the common bile duct (CBD) and right intrahepatic (IH) duct, and had undergone endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) twice with sphincterotomy once. Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) at presentation showed dilated CBD and bilateral IH ducts with calculi, evidence of acute cholecystitis and early cholangitis. He subsequently underwent a third ERCP with stone retrieval, stent placement and a laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Ursodiol dose was optimized and antibiotics were initiated. Follow-up MRCP showed improvement in CBD and IH duct dilation; the stent was removed. One month later, a fifth ERCP was performed for worsening symptoms associated with a distal filling defect in the left IH duct. Sludge was removed from the CBD and another stent was placed. A sixth ERCP with stent removal showed no stones. Interval MRCP showed resolution of IH calculi, a CBD filling defect suggestive of sludge, and thickening and enhancement of IH bile ducts with focal areas of alternating narrowing and dilation. He was maintained on antibiotics, and his symptoms persisted over the following months despite resolution of sludge, peri-portal edema and duct-wall enhancement. There was a background of increased IH ductal dilation with “beaded appearance”. Interval imaging has demonstrated persistence of these findings with recurrence of hepatolithiasis in both IH ducts, despite improved symptoms. Conclusions This case describes two rare manifestations of pediatric CF-associated liver disease: hepatolithiasis and secondary sclerosing cholangitis. While CFTR dysfunction alone predisposes to gallstone formation, the patient’s clinical course supports a theory for the development of hepatolithiasis resembling that of recurrent pyogenic cholangitis, whereby bacteriobilia from chronic or recurrent infection may promote lithogenesis in the presence of inflammatory bile duct damage. In this patient, secondary sclerosing cholangitis may have resulted from cycles of cholangitis and hepatolithiasis; alternatively, it may represent under-recognized cholangiopathy in the pediatric CF population. Funding Agencies None

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