0521779407-17 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:19
1216 Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis
ischemic bile duct injury, drug-induced sclerosing cholangitis (flox-
uridine)
■sclerosing variant of cholangiocarcinoma
■idiopathic adulthood ductopenia
■autoimmune cholangitis
■drug-induced cholestasis
management
What to Do First
■establish diagnosis by MRCP or ERCP; exclude secondary causes
of sclerosing cholangitis, cholangiocarcinoma; look for evidence of
inflammatory bowel disease (if patient has no colonic symptoms or
has not been previously evaluated do flexible sigmoidoscopy, biop-
sies)
General Measures
■use liver biopsy, imaging studies to assess disease severity and rule
out biliary obstruction or cirrhosis, exclude other diagnoses
■therapeutic ERCP if evidence of biliary ductular dilatation on ultra-
sound, CT or sudden change in liver function tests; do biliary brush-
ings/biopsies to rule out cholangiocarcinoma
■identify and manage the silent complications of chronic cholestasis
■adjust or avoid potentially hepatotoxic medications
■optimize therapy of underlying inflammatory bowel disease
specific therapy
■no proven medical therapy; UDCA commonly used in high doses
(25–30 mg/kg/day)
■therapy directed at treating complications of the disease
follow-up
Routine
■early disease: patients should be seen semi-annually and screened
for possible silent complications of PSC (i.e. assess bone mineral
density); manage biliary complications with therapeutic ERCP
■advanced disease: patients should be seen every 3–6 months and
■refer for liver transplantation (OLT) when minimal listing criteria are
met (CPT score≥7)
complications and prognosis
Complications
■cirrhosis/end-stage liver disease: refer for OLT, sooner rather than
later, to avoid complication of cholangiocarcinoma