Corticosteroid Therapy for Indeterminate Pediatric Acute Liver Failure and Aplastic Anemia with Acute Hepatitis - 24/04/19
Abstract |
Objective |
To examine the characteristics and outcomes of a multicenter patient cohort with indeterminate pediatric acute liver failure (IND-PALF) and with aplastic anemia with acute hepatitis treated with corticosteroids.
Study design |
Retrospective study of patients age 1-17 years with IND-PALF and aplastic anemia with acute hepatitis who presented between 2009 and 2018 to 1 of 4 institutions and were treated with corticosteroids for presumed immune dysregulation.
Results |
Of 28 patients with IND-PALF (median of 4.0 years of age [range 1-16] and 71% male) 71% (n = 20) were treated with 0.5-4 mg/kg/day of intravenous methylprednisolone, and 8 patients received 10 mg/kg/day followed by a taper. By 21 days postcorticosteroid initiation, 14 patients (50%) underwent liver transplantation, 13 patients (46%) recovered with their native liver, and 1 patient (4%) died. Patients who recovered with their native liver received a median of 139 days (range 19-749) of corticosteroid therapy, with a median of 12 days (range 1-240) to international normalized ratio ≤1.2. Patients with aplastic anemia with acute hepatitis (n = 6; median of 9.5 years of age [range 1-12], 83% male), received 1-2 mg/kg/day of methylprednisolone for a median of 100 days (range 63-183), and all recovered with their native liver. One patient with IND-PALF and 2 patients with aplastic anemia with acute hepatitis developed a serious infection within 90 days postcorticosteroid initiation.
Conclusions |
Many patients with IND-PALF or aplastic anemia with acute hepatitis that were treated with corticosteroids improved, but survival with native liver may not be different from historical reports. A randomized controlled trial exploring the benefits and risks of steroid therapy is needed before it is adopted broadly.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : immune dysregulation, immunosuppression, liver transplantation, critical care, supportive care, treatment
Abbreviations : ALF, ALT, AIH, HHV, IND-PALF, INR, PALFSG, PALF, PCR
Plan
| The authors declare no conflicts of interest. |
Vol 208
P. 23-29 - mai 2019 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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