Abstract

The pathogenesis of the pruritus that complicates cholestasis in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) is uncertain. The limited and inconsistent efficacy of conventional empiric therapies, such as anion exchange resins and rifampicin, has led to inconclusive trials of invasive experimental therapies, such as plasmapheresis, charcoal haemoperfusion and partial external diversion of bile. However, some double-blind, placebo-controlled trials that used a subjective primary efficacy end-point (the perception of pruritus) have suggested that certain drugs that affect the metabolism of many compounds, for example rifampicin, may be efficacious. The potential mechanisms by which such drugs may mediate a beneficial effect have not been determined. There is a paucity of data to indicate whether peripheral events, such as the accumulation of bile acids in interstitial fluid of the skin, initiate the neural events which mediate this form of pruritus. Recent findings suggest that central events in the brain, specifically an increase in neurotransmission/ neuromodulation mediated by endogenous opioid agonists (increased opioidergic tone), may be implicated. This hypothesis is supported by three lines of evidence. (1) Opioid receptor ligands with agonist properties (e.g. morphine) mediate pruritus. (2) Endogenous opioid-mediated neurotransmission/neuromodulation in the central nervous system (CNS) is increased in cholestasis. (3) Controlled trials have shown that opiate antagonists induce ameliorations of the behavioural consequence of the pruritus of cholestasis (scratching activity). In such trials, measurements of scratching activity independent of limb movements constituted an objective quantitative primary efficacy end-point. Potent opiate antagonists, that are bioavailable when given by mouth, such as nalmefene and naltrexone, may have a place in the long-term management of pruritus in patients with PBC. Evidence that increased serotoninergic neurotransmission also contributes to the pruritus is at present less strong than that implicating an involvement of the opioid system, and further investigation is needed to determine whether specific serotonin receptor subtype ligands have a place in the treatment of pruritus in patients with PBC. There is some evidence which suggests that increased serotoninergic neurotransmission in the CNS contributes to fatigue of central origin, but whether there is a causal relationship between altered serotoninergic neurotransmission and the profound fatigue that occurs in many patients with PBC is currently uncertain.

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