Abstract

Cholestatic liver diseases are a significant cause of morbidity and mortality and the leading indication for pediatric liver transplant. These include diseases such as biliary atresia, Alagille syndrome, progressive intrahepatic cholestasis entities, ductal plate abnormalities including Caroli syndrome and congenital hepatic fibrosis, primary sclerosing cholangitis, bile acid synthesis defects, and certain metabolic disease. Medical management of these patients typically includes supportive care for complications of chronic cholestasis including malnutrition, pruritus, and portal hypertension. However, there are limited effective interventions to prevent progressive liver damage in these diseases, leaving clinicians to ultimately rely on liver transplantation in many cases. Agents such as ursodeoxycholic acid, bile acid sequestrants, and rifampicin have been mainstays of treatment for years with the understanding that they may decrease or alter the composition of the bile acid pool, though clinical response to these medications is frequently insufficient and their effects on disease progression remain limited. Recently, animal and human studies have identified potential new therapeutic targets which may disrupt the enterohepatic circulation of bile acids, alter the expression of bile acid transporters or decrease the production of bile acids. In this article, we will review bile formation, bile acid signaling, and the relevance for current and newer therapies for pediatric cholestasis. We will also highlight further areas of potential targets for medical intervention for pediatric cholestatic liver diseases.

Highlights

  • Causes of chronic liver injury in children include a wide variety of congenital and acquired diseases

  • Cholesterol is converted into the primary bile acids cholic acid (CA) and chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA) in humans by a complex biochemical pathway involving a number of different hepatic enzymes within the “neutral” pathway or the “acidic” bile acid synthesis pathways

  • Though some patients treated with cholic acid in an open label study continued to have disease progression, it is proposed that these patients had advanced liver disease prior to starting treatment and that for patients newly diagnosed with these rare diseases, if therapy is initiated promptly, disease progression can be halted and liver transplantation may be avoided [112]

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Summary

Frontiers in Medicine

Cholestatic liver diseases are a significant cause of morbidity and mortality and the leading indication for pediatric liver transplant These include diseases such as biliary atresia, Alagille syndrome, progressive intrahepatic cholestasis entities, ductal plate abnormalities including Caroli syndrome and congenital hepatic fibrosis, primary sclerosing cholangitis, bile acid synthesis defects, and certain metabolic disease. Medical management of these patients typically includes supportive care for complications of chronic cholestasis including malnutrition, pruritus, and portal hypertension.

INTRODUCTION
Pediatric Cholestasis Current and Emerging Therapies
BILE SYNTHESIS
Protein involved
ENTEROHEPATIC CIRCULATION
MEDICAL MANAGEMENT OF PEDIATRIC CHOLESTASIS
Chemical chaperones
CHOLIC ACID
BILE ACID SEQUESTRANTS
Findings
CONCLUSION
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