Abstract

Autoimmune hepatitis presenting as acute on chronic liver failure (AIH-ACLF) is a novel entity with limited data on clinical course and management. We assessed outcomes in patients of AIH-ACLF with no extrahepatic organ dysfunction/failure when administered steroids. In this retrospective analysis, clinical data, laboratory parameters, liver biopsy indices and prognostic scores such as model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) and Child-Turcotte-Pugh (CTP) scores at baseline were computed for patients with AIH-ACLF and compared across strata of incident infections and transplant-free survival. The primary outcome was 90-day transplant-free survival. Biochemical remission was assessed, and predictors of end points were identified. Twenty-nine patients of AIH-ACLF were included with a median follow-up of 4 months. The 90- and 180-daytransplant-free survival rates of 55.2 [95% confidence interval (CI): 39.7-76.6]% and 30.2(95% CI: 16.7-54.6)%, respectively, were attained on steroids. Three patients (10.3%) underwent liver transplant while 16 (55.2%) deaths occurred. Infections developed in 12 patients (41.3%), leading to worsening prognostic scores, new onset organ dysfunction/failure and 11 deaths. Seven of ten patients (70%) in the transplant-free survivor group attained biochemical remission on follow-up. The MELD score<24 (sensitivity: 68.4%; specificity: 80%) and CTP<11 (sensitivity: 78.9%; specificity: 90%) had best predictive value for survival, in addition to decrease in the MELD score at 2 weeks (sensitivity: 78.9%; specificity: 70%). Patients with AIH-ACLF have a morbid disease course despite treatment with steroids. Patients with no extrahepatic organ failure with good baseline prognostic scores may be administered steroids with close monitoring for change in MELD over 2 weeks.

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