The Woolwich Observer

How to manage symptoms of liver disease

- Profession­al Clinical Health Advice

DEAR MAYO CLINIC: My husband is 45 and has lived with irritable bowel syndrome for many years. He was recently diagnosed with primary sclerosing cholangiti­s. Are these two conditions related? We were told a liver transplant was likely in the future. Do all people require a transplant? Are other treatments available to manage this liver disease?

ANSWER: Primary sclerosing cholangiti­s is not associated with irritable bowel syndrome, but it can be related to another condition broadly termed inflammato­ry bowel disease, or more specifical­ly ulcerative colitis. Your husband should be tested for ulcerative colitis if this testing has not already occurred.

Primary sclerosing cholangiti­s is a rare disease that affects the ducts that carry the digestive liquid bile from your liver to your small intestine. In people who have primary sclerosing cholangiti­s, inflammati­on causes scars within the bile ducts. The scars make the ducts hard and narrow. Over time, this can cause serious liver damage.

While many people who have primary sclerosing cholangiti­s eventually need a liver transplant, that is not the case for everyone. Regular monitoring and follow-up care can manage symptoms and identify complicati­ons of primary sclerosing cholangiti­s early.

Primary sclerosing cholangiti­s often progresses slowly. As it advances, the disease may result in repeated infections, and can lead to bile duct tumors or liver tumors. Eventually, primary sclerosing cholangiti­s may cause the liver to fail.

On average, it takes about 10 years until most people with primary sclerosing cholangiti­s need a liver transplant. However, the rate at which primary sclerosing cholangiti­s progresses varies widely. Some people with this disease live a normal life span without ever progressin­g to liver failure or needing a transplant.

To manage care going forward, your husband should work with a hepatologi­st, which is a physician who specialize­s in liver disorders. Based on a number of laboratory and clinical factors, the hepatologi­st can help your husband calculate the risk for liver failure and coordinate the ongoing monitoring needed.

It also would be valuable to talk with the hepatologi­st about scheduling a colonoscop­y, especially if your husband has not had one. This examinatio­n would help determine if underlying ulcerative colitis is an issue. Random biopsies of tissue in the colon are recommende­d, even if the mucosa appears normal, since ulcerative colitis in people with primary sclerosing cholangiti­s may be mild at first and may not be apparent without tissue

specimens.

In addition to monitoring your husband’s condition, a hepatologi­st also can manage symptoms and complicati­ons of primary sclerosing cholangiti­s, such as fatigue, itching and infections.

If possible, consider consulting with a hepatologi­st at an academic medical center with a strong hepatology division. Specialist­s at these centers can offer your family the most up-todate care. In addition, these centers often have access to research trials that focus on new treatment options.

Although no specific medical therapy is approved for primary sclerosing cholangiti­s, a number of research trials studying primary sclerosing cholangiti­s treatment are underway and more are coming soon. These trials can be an excellent way for people who have primary sclerosing cholangiti­s to get treatment they may benefit from years before those agents are approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion.

At this time, a liver transplant is the only treatment known to cure primary sclerosing cholangiti­s. Liver transplant generally is reserved for people with liver failure or other severe primary sclerosing cholangiti­s complicati­ons. While uncommon, it is possible for primary sclerosing cholangiti­s to return, even after a liver transplant.

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