Background-There is a paucity of data in the literature on the risks associated with, and optimal management of, pregnancy in patients with autoimmune hepatitis (AIH). Aims-To assess maternal and fetal outcomes in relation to clinical management of pregnancy in a large cohort of patients with well defined AIH. Methods-A review of all known pregnancies in 162 females with definite AIH attending our clinics between 1983 and 1998, with respect to treatment, natural history, and outcome. Results-Thirty one live births (one twin) resulted from 35 pregnancies in 18 women (seven with cirrhosis). Median age at conception was 28 years (range 18-36). Two patients presented with AIH de novo during pregnancy. At conception, in 15 pregnancies patients had been receiving azathioprine alone or (in nine) with prednisolone, in seven prednisolone alone, and in one cyclosporin. Fetal loss at >20 weeks' gestation occurred in two instances. Flares in disease activity occurred during four pregnancies and within three months of delivery in a further four. Among the 31 children born (median follow up 10 years) only two abnormalities have been identified: Perthes' disease in one and severe mental and physical handicap in a second who was born prematurely following decompensation of the mother's liver disease. Neither mother was receiving azathioprine. Conclusions-Successful completion of pregnancy is a realistic expectation for patients with well controlled AIH. Treatment options vary, but azathioprine appears to be generally safe and without adverse outcomes for mother or baby. Vigilance is required, however, and patients need to be monitored carefully during pregnancy and for several months post partum. (Gut 2001;48:97-102)
Serial serum samples from 16 Italian patients presenting with acute hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections (which progressed to chronic hepatitis in six) were screened for the non-organ-specific autoantibodies most frequently associated with autoimmune hepatitis (AIH), as well as for antibodies against the hepatic asialoglycoprotein receptor (ASGP-R) and against the GOR peptide. One patient had low titres (1:10-1:80) of liver-kidney microsomal (LKM-1) antibodies during the recovery phase and three others had transient low titres of anti-smooth muscle (IgM class, 1:10) or anti-ASGP-R (1:150-1:300). Anti-GOR was detected in 43 (65%) of 66 sera from 13 of these patients. There was no correlation between any of these findings and progression to chronicity. By comparison, 18 patients with AIH studied concurrently before institution of immunosuppressive therapy all had antinuclear and/or smooth muscle antibodies, or LKM-1, at 1:40-1:640 and anti-ASGP-R at 1:300-1:2,100. None of these 18 had evidence of HCV infection and all were seronegative for anti-GOR. The findings indicate that the autoantibodies usually associated with AIH are rare in HCV infections but the virus can very occasionally induce a transient autoimmune response. Anti-GOR appears to be an antibody specifically related to HCV infection and is probably not a marker of induced autoimmunity, and it does not predict progression to chronic hepatitis.
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