Title: HepatoBiliary Dysfunction in Home TPN Patients
1Hepato-Biliary Dysfunction in Home TPN Patients
- Working Group Meeting
- April 24-26, 2003, Vancouver, BC
- Dr. Leah Gramlich, Dr. Tara Chalmers-Nixon
- University of Alberta
2Objectives
- Prevalence of hepatobiliary complications
- Clinical features
- Etiology of TPN hepatobiliary complications
- Diagnostic work-up
- Optimizing the TPN prescription
- Therapeutic options
3Case presentation
- 53 F with ileo-colonic Crohns disease x 22yrs
- Developed ischemic small bowel 2 mechanical
bowel obstruction from adhesions - 6 feet of small bowel, 1-2 feet of colon remain
- Persistent severe diarrhea with oral intake
- Meds Codeine 60mg qid, multivitaminADEK daily,
Pantoloc bid, Clomipramine 25 mg daily, Mg
rougier, T3 prn
4Case contd
- Height 165 cm
- Weight 42.5 kg
- Started on TPN March 29, 2001
- By September, 2001, weight 56.8 kg
- September, 2002 elevated liver enzymes
BMI 15.6 IBW 54-68 kg
5Case contd
- TPN prescription, November 2002
- Weight 49.5 kg
- Infusion 6/7 days
- 1289 kcal (26 kcal/kg)
- 69g protein, 180g Dextrose, 40g lipid
- 200mg carnitine
- Initiated work-up of abnormal liver tests
6Case contd
- Diagnostic Work-up
- Monthly LFTs
- Liver U/S
- Hepatitis work-up HCV, HBV, HAV, quantitative
Igs, AMA, ASMA, alpha 1 A-T, Cu, Ceruloplasmin,
Fe, TIBC - Hemachromatosis genetics if indicated
- MRCP/ERCP
- Liver biopsy
- Hepatologist referral
7Case contd
- Therapy algorithm (simultaneous)
- Minimize CHO in TPN
- Enhance po intake/enteral nutrition
- Ursodeoxycholic acid
- Cyclic antibiotics
- Evaluation for intestinal transplantation
8Oct/Nov, 2002
Lytes - normal Conjugated bili - 116 Ferritin -
461 Fe - 7 TIBC - 49 Satn - 0.14 Quant. IgGs -
Nml Ceruloplasmin - 0.50 AMA, ASMA negative
9Oct/Nov, 2002
Lytes - normal Conjugated bili - 116 Ferritin -
461 Fe - 7 TIBC - 49 Satn - 0.14 Quant. IgGs -
Nml Ceruloplasmin - 0.50 AMA, ASMA negative
10Case contd
- Abdominal ultrasound, Oct. 9, 2002
- Enlarged homogeneous liver
- Normal gallbladder, spleen, kidneys, pancreas
- MRI/MRCP, Dec., 2002
- No obvious biliary ductal abnormallity noted
11Case contd
- Liver biopsy, November 15, 2002
- Severe cholestasis and balloon degeneration of
hepatocytes - Acidophil bodies, hypertrophied Kupffer cells
with PAS pigment - Triadal fibrosis, biliary ductular proliferation
with inflammatory infiltrate - Dx hyperalimentation (TPN) cholestasis
12Histology
13Case contd
- Started on URSO 750 tid and Cipro 500 bid x 2
weeks, November 21, 2002 - Follow-up labs
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15Case contd
- Hepatology referral Dec. 11, 2002
- Concurred with diagnosis of TPN cholestasis
- Agreed that changes to TPN, URSO and Abx had a
beneficial effect on liver enzyme tests
16Objectives
- Prevalence of hepatobiliary complications
- Clinical features
- Etiology of TPN hepatobiliary complications
- Diagnostic work-up
- Optimizing the TPN prescription
- Therapeutic options
17TPN and Liver Complications
- Abnormal liver function tests 25-100
- Liver Failure15-40
- Cavicchi et al (ann int med. 2000132525-32)
- Seidner et al ASPEN03
18TPN and Liver Complications
- 65 patients develop cholestasis after a mean of
6 months - Prevalence of complicated TPN associated liver
disease - 26/-9 at 2 yrs - 50/-13
at 6 yrs - 22 of all deaths attributable to
TPN liver disease
19Biochemical Markers of Liver Disease
20Time Course of Changes in Liver Tests after
Initiating TPN
JPEN 1554. 1991
21Biochemical Markers of Liver Disease In HTPN
- Cavicchi Cholestasis ggt, bili, Alk phos gt1.5
x uln (require 2/3) - Seidner mild lt 2x uln moderate 2-5x
uln severe gt5x uln Liver
failure bili gt3mg/dl, alblt3.2 g/dl, PT gt 3
seconds prolonged
22TPN Liver Disease Histology
23Clinical Syndromes
- NAFLD NASH-type, steatosis, phospholipidosis,
steatohepatitis - Fibrosis
- Micronodular Cirrhosis
- Cholestasis
- Cholelithiasis, Choledocholithiasis
- Acalculous cholecystitis
24Risk Factors for TPN-Related Liver Disease
- Patient factors age, low birth weight,
preexisting liver disease, microsepsis - GIT factors bowel remnant lt50cm
- Nutritional Factors
- limited oral or enteral intake
- increased reliance on TPN
- increased duration of TPN
- composition of TPN lipid, CHO, Pro, other
25Etiology of TPN Hepatobiliary Disease
- Factors not related to TPN
- Factors related to TPN
26Etiology of TPN Hepatobiliary Disease
A Inadequate bile fomation B Nutritional
deficiency C Inadequate stimulation
of Enterohepatic bile circulation And intestinal
function
27Etiology of TPN Hepatobiliary Disease
- Inadequate stimulation of the enterohepatic
circulation - lack/reduction of CCK secretion
- lack/reduction of gallbladder contraction and
emptying - reduction of bile flow and stimulation at level
of hepatocyte - immaturity of biliary secretory system in
neonates
28Etiology of TPN Hepatobiliary Disease
- Abnormal bile acid metabolism
- bacterial overgrowth in absence of of enteral
stimulation and presence of enteral stasis - promote formation of lithocholate from
chenodeoxycholate - deconjugation of taurine and glycine from bile
acids
29Etiology of TPN Hepatobiliary Disease
- Sepsis and Inflammation formation of cholestatic
endotoxins - bacterial overgrowth in patients with altered GIT
motility - ?bacterial translocation
- CVL related sepsis
- Other septic foci
- SBS Chronic inflammation Cholestasis
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31Evidence for Inflammation in TPN Cholestasis
- Increased levels of TNF in HTPN pateints (Reimund
J et al. Nutrition 17(4)300-304) - Hepatic cholestasis associated with reduction in
serum albumin (Burstyne, Jensen. Nutrition
200016(11/12)1090) - Subgroup of HTPN pateints without inflammation,
no cholestasis (McCowan, Ann int med 2000.
133(12)1009-10)
32Etiology of TPN Hepatobiliary Disease Related to
TPN
- Lipid - deficiency/excess/type
- Carbohydrate/calories
- Protein - deficiency/excess
- Micronutrients
33TPN Toxicity Lipid
- Mechanisms
- high in n-6 fatty acids, low/absent n-3 fatty
acids stimulate macrophage activiation - phospholipidosis and microvacuolar steatosis with
lipid emulsions (20 with 1/2 that in 10) - impaired response to endotoxin
- impaired phagocye function
- ?plant phytosterols
34TPN Toxicity Calories and Carbohydrate
- Mechanism altered insulinglucagon ratio in
portal circulation leads to hyperinsulinemia and
conversion of glucose to fat in liver - Limit infusion rate to lt 4mg/kg/min
35TPN Toxicity Protein
- ?Mechanisms
- Altered cannalicular bile flow, permeability
- depletion of ATP with excess methionine
- May be related to deficiency or excess (MET, CYS
(Taurine), TRY byproducts)
36TPN Toxicity Other
- Manganese toxicity
- Taurine deficiency
- conditionally essential in premature infants
- role in conjugating bile acids
- Carnitine Deficiency synthesized from LYS and
MET in liver and kidney - conditionally essential in neonates
- role in LCFA transport
37Sepsis as a Cause of Cholestasis
- Source CVL, GIT, billiary stasis
- Findings - sepsis ass. with increased LFTs
- reduction of LFTs after sepsis Rx
- Mechanism
- ?toxic effect of endotoxin or LPS on
hepatobilliary system - ?altered hepatic secretion
- ?TNF secretion
- ? Increase GIT permeability
38Investigation of Abnormal LFTs in Home TPN
39Therapeutic Options
- Nutrition related
- Avoid overfeeding of macro and micronutrients
to avoid liver overload with nutrients - Enterally feed to preserve intestinal
integrity, hormonal balance, enzyme secretion,
and prevent bacterial translocation - Cycle PN to avoid continuous liver overload
40Therapeutic Options
- Not nutrition related
- Avoid/treat sepsis to avoid bacterial and
endotoxin hepatototoxic effects - URSO to increase bile flow, reduce toxic bile
acids - CCK to increase gallbladder contractility
- Antibiotics to inhibit bacterial overgrowth
- Cholestyramine treat pruritis, decrease diarrhea
in SBS
41Optimize the Nutrient Prescription
- Stimulate the GI Tract
- advance PO intake
- Consider EN
- Treat symptoms that limit oral intake
42Nutrient Prescription
- Avoid overfeeding
- 25-35kcal/kg IC if in doubt
- Limit CHO to lt 4mg/kg/min
- Limit fat to lt 1gm/kg if cholestasis develops,
consider 0.5gm/kg
43Nutrient Prescription
- Provide a mixed fuel substrate (lipid 25-30 of
calories) - Cycle TPN
- Replete suspected deficiencies carnitine,
taurine, choline
44Angelico Della Guardia, APT 2000 14(2)54-7
45Therapeutic options
- Postulated mechanisms
- Immature or altered biliary secretory system
- Translocation of gut bacteria
- Abnormal amino acid uptake
- May cause formation of toxic bile salts known to
cause cholestasis by damaging bile canaliculi - Excess lipids
46Therapeutic options
- Postulated mechanisms
- Immature or altered biliary secretory system
- Translocation of gut bacteria
- Abnormal amino acid uptake
- May cause formation of toxic bile salts known to
cause cholestasis by damaging bile canaliculi - Excess lipids
Antibiotics
47Therapeutic options - not related to TPN
- Rule out other causes
- UDCA
- Antibiotics
- CCK
- Others (Phenobarbital, Rifampin, anti-TNF)
48UDCA
- Hydrophilic bile acid from liver/intestines
- Stimulates bile formation, reduces cholesterol
absorption/synthesis, thus decreasing gallstone
formation - Administration may increase bile flow, displace
toxic bile acids, reducing bilirubin levels in
serum and liver
49UDCA - Animal evidence
- Duerksen et al. Gastro 1996
- Piglet model of TPN cholestasis (n23 total)
- Piglets assigned to three groups I milk fed,
II TPN fed, III TPNUDCA for three weeks - TPN fed pigs had markedly reduced bile flow
- Administration of UDCA in TPN fed pigs normalized
bile flow, and reduced serum and liver bilirubin
levels
50UDCA - Animal evidence
- Gunsar et al. Hepato-gastro, 2002
- Rabbit model of TPN cholestasis, n18
- Grp A TPN, Grp B TPNUDCA(po), Grp C
TPNUDCAMNZ - Grps BC had significantly less elevations in
liver chemistry Grp C had lower bilirubin levels
than grp B - Liver histology Grp A6/6 abnormal, Grp B5/6
normal, Grp C3/6 normal - UDCA MNZ improves liver chemistry and histology
51UDCA - Human evidence
- Spagnuolo et al. Gastro, 1996
- 7 children on TPN for intractable diarrhea with
TPN cholestasis given UDCA po (30mg/kg/d) - UDCA was associated with decreased liver
biochemistry and disappearance of stigmata of CLD - 6/7 children recovered and resumed oral feeding
eventually
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53UDCA - Human evidence
- Beau et al., Journal of Hepatol, 1994
- 9 adults on home TPN for SBS
- UDCA at approx. 12mg/kg/d po for 2 months
- Serum GGT, ALT reduced significantly with UDCA
treatment - No significant change in AST, ALP, bili
54Antibiotics
- Proposed to decrease bacterial overgrowth and
hence endotoxin effects on liver - There are no controlled trials using antibiotics
in TPN related hepatobiliary dysfunction - No consensus as to which antibiotic to use
55Antibiotics - Animal evidence
- Pappo, et al., JPEN, 1992
- Polymyxin B in rat model of TPN related hepatic
steatosis - 46 Sabra rats divided into groups
- Grp I (n12) control
- Grp II (n10) TPN
- Grp III (n7) TPN po Polymyxin B
- Grp IV (n17) TPNIV Polymyxin B
56Antibiotics - Animal evidence
- Polymyxin B treated groups had
- less hepatic fat
- less gram negative bacterial counts of the cecum
- significantly less TNF production that TPN fed
rats w/o antibiotic - Conluded that Polymyxin B protects by inhibiting
overgrowth of toxic bacteria, its anti-LPS
activity thus preventing hepatic steatosis and
TNF production
57Antibiotics - Human evidence
- Spurr et al., JPEN, 1989
- Retrospective chart review of very low birth
weight infants empirically treated (or not) with
oral gent for prevention of NEC depending on the
institution in which they were born - N12 in each group
- Grp I po gent 2.5mg/kg q 12h Grp II - none
58Antibiotics - Human evidence
- Significantly reduced incidence of NEC in treated
group - Grp I 1/12 developed cholestasis
- Grp II 5/12 developed cholestasis, p0.05
- Concluded that oral gent was protective against
TPN cholestasis, and warranted a prospective RCT
59CCK
- Hormone that enhances gallbladder contractility
- Proposed to prevent biliary sludge
- Human evidence
- Sitzmann et al. Surgery, Gyne, Obst, 1990
- Placebo controlled RCT of patients on TPN for gt21
days - Grp I (n8) IV NS
- Grp II (n7) IV CCK, 50 nanograms/kg IV/day
60CCK
- None of the patients in CCK arm had biliary
sludge by U/S, 5/8 in control group had sludge - Better emptying of gb in treatment group
61Intestinal Transplantation
- Survival on home TPN is good
- 98 at 2 yrs
- 80 at 4 yrs
- 65 at 6 yrs
- 56 at 8 yrs
- Survival for intestinal transplantation is about
50 at 2 yrs - Not all patients get off TPN entirely (66-69)
Cavicchi et al. 2000 Annals
62Figure 2. Patient and graft survival. The
actuarial patient and death-censored graft
survival vs month after intestinal
transplantation is shown for all 17 patients
undergoing transplantation. (Farmer et al.,
Archives of Surgery 2001)
63Intestinal Transplantation
- Currently reserved for TPN dependent patients who
develop life-threatening complications such as - End stage liver disease
- Loss of venous access
- Recurrent sepsis/catheter infections
- Major fluid and electrolyte imbalances
- When life expectancy on TPN falls below 50,
consider intestinal transplantation
64Phenobarbital
- Proposed to enhance bilirubin conjugation
- Little evidence, and may be harmful
- Not recommended
65Therapeutics summary
- Optimize nutrient prescription
- UDCA beneficial
- Antibiotics probably beneficial
- CCK probably beneficial
- Intestinal transplantation evaluation if survival
unlikely with ongoing TPN