Ritonavir/indinavir 100/800 mg twice daily appears to be effective up to 48 weeks despite high baseline viraemia and low CD4 cell count in antiretroviral-naive patients. However, discontinuation due to adverse events, especially nephrotoxicity, is frequent and limits treatment duration. Therefore, extra hydration appears inevitable with this combination.
We report on the difficult differential diagnosis of liver involvement in disseminated Langerhans' cell histiocytosis (LCH). Three years after treatment of LCH involving the skull and pelvic bones, an 18-year-old girl presented with abdominal pain and cholestatic liver disease. At this time, liver biopsy showed portal infiltrates which were diagnosed as chronic non-suppurative destructive cholangitis. Two years later, she was icteric under progredient hepatic failure. A second liver biopsy revealed biliary fibrosis and granulomatous inflammation with destruction of the portal bile ducts. The morphological changes in both liver biopsies could be identified as LCH by immunohistochemical detection of CD1a and S-100-positive Langerhans' cells. Morphological changes and clinical findings in LCH of the liver may resemble primary sclerosing cholangitis or chronic non-suppurative destructive cholangitis. Therefore, LCH is an important differential diagnosis of chronic destructive cholangitis with cholestatic liver disease, especially in children and young adults. The diagnosis can be verified by S-100 and CD1a immunohistochemistry.
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