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Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer Sciences, University of Birmingham and Department of Cellular Pathology, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham. U.K.

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Page 1: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis CDiagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis:

Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome?

Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer Sciences, University of Birmingham and Department of Cellular Pathology, Queen Elizabeth Hospital,

Birmingham. U.K.

Page 2: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C in the Liver Allograft

• HCV cirrhosis commonest indication for liver transplantation

• Re-infection is universal– begins within few hours of reperfusion

– HCV-RNA >> pre-transplant levels

• Most cases (70-90%) result in graft inflammation

• Many progress to cirrhosis

– 20-30% by 5 years, up to 50% at 10 years

• 10-30% develop graft failure (Roche 2010, Ponziani 2011)

– most common indication for late retransplantation

Page 3: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C in the Liver AllograftHistological Features

Typical Histological Features

- as seen in the non-transplanted liver

Atypical Histological Features

- modified by immunosuppression

- interaction with other complications

• Many post-transplant biopsies have features reflecting more than one process

• Liver biopsy may help to identify main cause of graft damage

Page 4: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C in the Liver AllograftHistological Features

Typical Histological Features

- as seen in the non-transplanted liver

Atypical Histological Features

- modified by immunosuppression

- interaction with other complications

Page 5: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C in Liver Allografts - Evolution of Histological Changes

Phase

(time post-transplant)

Histology Comments

Early infection

(0-2 months)

Mild non-specific changes

Lobular disarray

Acidophil bodies

Lack of inflammation

Steatosis

Established infection

(2-6 months)

Acute hepatitis Lobular inflammation (usually mild)

Progressive damage

(> 6 months)

Chronic hepatitis Portal/periportal inflammation

Fibrosis/cirrhosis

Page 6: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C in Liver Allografts - Evolution of Histological Changes

Phase

(time post-transplant)

Histology Comments

Early infection

(0-2 months)

Mild non-specific changes

Lobular disarray

Acidophil bodies

Lack of inflammation

Steatosis

Established infection

(2-6 months)

Acute hepatitis Lobular inflammation (usually mild)

Progressive damage

(> 6 months)

Chronic hepatitis Portal/periportal inflammation

Fibrosis/cirrhosis

Page 7: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Recurrent HCV –5 weeks post-OLT

Page 8: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Early Recurrent HCV lobular disarray, variation in cell size

Page 9: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C in Liver Allografts - Evolution of Histological Changes

Phase

(time post-transplant)

Histology Comments

Early infection

(0-2 months)

Mild non-specific changes

Lobular disarray

Acidophil bodies

Lack of inflammation

Steatosis

Established infection

(2-6 months)

Acute hepatitis Lobular inflammation (usually mild)

Progressive damage

(> 6 months)

Chronic hepatitis Portal/periportal inflammation

Fibrosis/cirrhosis

Page 10: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Recurrent HCV – 3 months post-OLTspotty lobular inflammation (mild)

Page 11: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C in Liver Allografts - Evolution of Histological Changes

Phase

(time post-transplant)

Histology Comments

Early infection

(0-2 months)

Mild non-specific changes

Lobular disarray

Acidophil bodies

Lack of inflammation

Steatosis

Established infection

(2-6 months)

Acute hepatitis Lobular inflammation (usually mild)

Progressive damage

(> 6 months)

Chronic hepatitis Portal/periportal inflammation

Fibrosis/cirrhosis

Page 12: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Recurrent Hepatitis C – 6 months post-OLTChronic Hepatitis

Page 13: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Chronic Hepatitis C in the Liver AllograftRole of Protocol Liver Biopsies

Most centres still obtain protocol annual review biopsies from HCV-positive patients

• e.g. 65% in recent survey of 35 LT centres (vs 25% for non-HCV patients) (Mells & Neuberger 2008)

• Histological abnormalities frequently present in HCV-positive patients with normal LFTs (Berenguer 2001, Sebagh 2003)

Page 14: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Chronic Hepatitis C in the Liver AllograftRole of Protocol Liver Biopsies

Mainly used to assess disease severity (especially fibrosis)

• Implications for prognosis (e.g. presence/severity of fibrosis at 1 year predicts subsequent progression to fibrosis/cirrhosis/graft failure)

• May influence treatment (anti-viral therapy to prevent fibrosis progression)

Scoring systems (e.g. METAVIR, Ishak) should be used with caution and only in patients with “pure” HCV infection.

Non-invasive methods (serum markers, transient elastography) increasingly used to assess fibrosis in post-transplant HCV

• Mainly useful to identify mild/early fibrosis versus advanced fibrosis/cirrhosis

• May also help to predict fibrosis progression

Page 15: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C in the Liver AllograftDifferences Compared with HCV in the Native Liver

1. More aggressive disease

– More severe inflammatory activity

– more rapid progression to fibrosis and cirrhosis

(20- 30% cirrhotic by 5 years, up to 50% by 10 years)

2. Atypical features

– Cholestatic features (“fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis”)

– Autoimmune features ( de novo AIH / “plasma cell hepatitis”)

3. Interaction with other graft complications

– Rejection (acute and chronic)

– Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease

Page 16: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C in the Liver AllograftDifferences Compared with HCV in the Native Liver

1. More aggressive disease

– More severe inflammatory activity

– more rapid progression to fibrosis and cirrhosis

(20- 30% cirrhotic by 5 years, up to 50% by 10 years)

2. Atypical features

– Cholestatic features (“fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis”)

– Autoimmune features ( de novo AIH / “plasma cell hepatitis”)

3. Interaction with other graft complications

– Rejection (acute and chronic)

– Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease

Page 17: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Recurrent Hepatitis C – Liver Biopsy 12 months post-transplant prominent lobular inflammation with zone 3 necrosis (central perivenulitis)

• Are these changes related to HCV alone?

or

• Is this HCV + another graft complication?

- Late acute rejection

- De novo AIH

Page 18: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

• Are these changes related to HCV alone?

or

• Is this HCV + another graft complication?

- Late acute rejection

- De novo AIH

• Histological distinction often difficult

- Clinical context (e.g. recent changes in immunosuppression and/or anti-viral therapy)

- Results of other investigations (e.g. HCV-RNA levels, auto-antibodies)

Recurrent Hepatitis C – Liver Biopsy 12 months post-transplant prominent lobular inflammation with zone 3 necrosis (central perivenulitis)

Page 19: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Aggressive Recurrent HCV

• Male, age 52. 21 months post-LT for HCV

• Antiviral therapy recently stopped because of nephric abscess

• Presented with acutely deranged LFTs (AST 650)

• Became HCV-RNA positive

Page 20: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C in the Liver AllograftDifferences Compared with HCV in the Native Liver

1. More aggressive disease

– More severe inflammatory activity

– more rapid progression to fibrosis and cirrhosis

(20- 30% cirrhotic by 5 years, up to 50% by 10 years)

2. Atypical features

– Cholestatic features (“fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis”)

– Autoimmune features ( de novo AIH / “plasma cell hepatitis”)

3. Interaction with other graft complications

– Rejection (acute and chronic)

– Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease

Page 21: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C with Cholestatic Features (“Fibrosing Cholestatic Hepatitis”)Pathogenesis

Most cases present within first 12 months post-transplant (peak 2-6 months)

High viral RNA levels (serum and intra-hepatic)

Impaired HCV-specific immune response

High viral load in hepatocytes may result in:

• Direct cytopathic injury to hepatocytes (ballooning, cholestasis)

• Replicative senescence in hepatocytes

– Stimulus for progenitor cell activation & ductular reaction

– Hepatic stellate cell activation

Fibrosis

Page 22: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C with Cholestatic Features (“Fibrosing Cholestatic Hepatitis”)Prevalence & Clinical Features

Prevalence

• Reported frequency varies (2-13%)

• May reflect different diagnostic criteria

• Higher frequency in HIV co-infected patients (up to 20% - Antoni 2011)

Clinical Features

• Jaundice and cholestatic liver biochemistry

– Other causes of cholestasis should be excluded (e.g. biliary obstruction, drug toxicity)

• Severe cases progress rapidly to graft failure

Page 23: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C with Cholestatic Features (“Fibrosing Cholestatic Hepatitis”)Histological Features

Early Features

• Hepatocyte ballooning and cholestasis, mainly perivenular

• Lobular disarray, little inflammation

• Perisinusoidal fibrosis (? related to hepatic stellate cell activation)

Later Changes

• Portal expansion with marginal ductular reaction

• Progressive fibrosis (periportal and bridging)

• Severe cases progressing rapidly to graft failure may be associated with multi-acinar necrosis and collapse

Page 24: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C with Cholestatic Features - Histological FeaturesDifferences Compared with Fibrosing Cholestatic Hepatitis B

• Cholestatic features frequently co-exist with more typical hepatitic

changes

• Fibrosis less prominent (cholestatic hepatitis C)

• Clinico-pathological severity variable

– Mild/early cases may respond to reduction in immunosuppression +/- anti-viral therapy

– Overall mortality 50% (Narang 2010)

Page 25: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Cholestatic Hepatitis C – Lobular Changes

Ballooning, lobular disarray Bilirubinostasis

Page 26: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Cholestatic Hepatitis C – Portal &Periportal Changes

Page 27: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

keratin 7

Ductular reaction

Also seen in:

• Biliary obstruction

• Acute rejection

Leads to periportal fibrosis

Cholestatic Hepatitis C – Portal &Periportal Changes

Page 28: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Cholestatic Hepatitis C – Fibrosis - Periportal and Perisinusoidal

Page 29: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer
Page 30: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C with “Autoimmune Features” ( de novo autoimmune hepatitis, “plasma cell hepatitis”)

1. Following Interferon Therapy (Cholongitas 2006,Kontorinis 2006,Berardi 2007,Merli 2009)

• 14 cases – all had biochemical, serological and histological features compatible with autoimmune

hepatitis (“de novo AIH”)

• Prevalence 20% (9/44) in largest study (Berardi 2006)

• 12/14 were HCV-RNA negative

• 10/14 responded to treatment with immunosuppression

Page 31: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Chronic Hepatitis in the Liver AllograftFeatures favouring an autoimmune aetiology

Portal inflammation with plasma cellsInterface hepatitis

Lobular inflammation (plasma cell rich) Confluent necrosis

(Central perivenulitis)

Page 32: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C with “Autoimmune Features” ( de novo autoimmune hepatitis, “plasma cell hepatitis”)

2. Unrelated to Interferon Therapy (Khettry 2007, Fiel 2008)

• 47 patients (prevalence 10%) - plasma cell rich portal and lobular infiltrates (“plasma cell hepatitis”)

• Centrilobular necro-inflammatory changes (“central perivenulitis”) in 43/47

• Worse outcome than cases of “typical” recurrent HCV

Pathogenesis

• 75% had increased serum immunoglobulins and/or autoantibodies (Khettry 2007)

• In keeping with DNAIH

• 82% had suboptimal immunosuppression, auto-antibodies only in low titre (Fiel 2008)

• Probably a form of rejection

• 40% of patients with plasma cell hepatitis post-LT had plasma cell-rich infiltrates in native liver at transplantation (versus 18% in control group) (Ward 2009)

Increasing evidence to suggest that DNAIH and late rejection are part of an overlapping spectrum of immune-mediated graft injury (pathogenesis and histological features)

Page 33: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C in the Liver AllograftDifferences Compared with HCV in the Native Liver

1. More aggressive disease

– More severe inflammatory activity

– more rapid progression to fibrosis and cirrhosis

(20- 30% cirrhotic by 5 years, up to 50% by 10 years)

2. Atypical features

– Cholestatic features (“fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis”)

– Autoimmune features ( de novo AIH / “plasma cell hepatitis”)

3. Interaction with other graft complications

– Rejection (acute and chronic)

– Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease

Page 34: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C and Rejection

Rejection/immunosuppression = risk factors for severe/progressive HCV

• Immunosuppression allows increased viral replication

• Predisposes to more severe inflammation when immunosuppression reduced

Higher incidence of acute and chronic rejection in HCV-positive patients

• HCV-associated changes may augment alloimmune-mediated lesions

• Common patterns of liver injury (e.g.portal inflammation, bile duct damage)

• Effects of anti-viral therapy (interferon)

• Stimulation of immune system

• Improved hepatocellular metabolism of immunosuppressive drugs after viral clearance from hepatocytes

Page 35: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C

versus

Rejection

Page 36: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C and Acute Rejection(Demetris Am J Surg Pathol 2004, Banff Working Party 2006)

• AR and recurrent HCV have overlapping histological features (portal inflammation, bile duct inflammation, venous endothelial inflammation) and may occur at the same time

• In most cases the pattern of inflammation enables the main cause of graft dysfunction to be identified

• Cases in which distinction between HCV and AR is difficult probably have a dual pathology

– In most of these cases rejection changes are mild

– HCV best considered as the primary diagnosis

– No additional immunosuppression required

• Increased immunosuppression should be considered as a treatment option if

– rejection changes moderate or severe

– features suggest progression to (early) chronic rejection

Page 37: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Late Cellular Rejection - Different Histological Features(Snover 1988, Kemnitz 1989, Cakaloglu 1995, Pappo 1995)

• Portal inflammation predominantly mononuclear

• Inflammation of bile ducts and venular endothelium less conspicuous

• More prominent interface hepatitis and lobular inflammation

• Overall features resemble chronic hepatitis (e.g. viral or autoimmune)

Page 38: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

“Idiopathic” chronic hepatitis

Common(est) histological diagnosis in late post-transplant biopsies

• 10-50% of biopsies > 1yr have unexplained inflammation (mainly portal, usually mild) that could be classified as “idiopathic” CH (Shaikh & Demetris 2007)

In cases where viral and autoimmune causes have been excluded:

• May be a form of rejection (late rejection with hepatitic features)

• A potentially important cause of graft fibrosis

– 50-70% of children with CH have bridging fibrosis/cirrhosis, 10 year post-transplant (Evans 2006, Herzog 2008)

“Idiopathic” Chronic HepatitisCirrhosis 5 years post-transplant

Page 39: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C versus Acute Rejection - Other Approaches

Immunostaining for HCV Antigens (Grassi 2006, Errico-Grigioni 2008, Sadamori 2009)

• Higher frequency of staining and greater proportion of positively staining hepatocytes in HCV than rejection.

Immunostaining for C4d (Schmeding, 2006, Lorho, 2006,Jain, 2006, Bellamy 2007)

• Higher frequency of C4d positivity in acute rejection (45-80%) than in recurrent HCV infection (0-12%)

Immunostaining for cell cycle entry protein mcm-2 (Unitt 2009)

• More mcm-2 positive portal lymphocytes in rejection than HCV

Immunostaining for MxA protein – marker of type 1 IFN activation (MacQuillan 2010)

• More hepatocellular expression in HCV than rejection

Page 40: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C versus Acute Rejection - Other Approaches Applications & Limitations of Immunohistochemistry

• Most studies have looked at “typical” cases of acute rejection and HCV, which are clearly distinguishable by routine microscopy.

• Problems with reproducibility (HCV tissue detection)

• Problems with specificity (C4d immunostaining)

• May help to identify main cause of graft damage in some cases where routine histological findings inconclusive

• High tissue expression of HCV antigens confirmed diagnosis of HCV hepatitis in 16 patients with inconclusive histological diagnosis (Grassi 2006)

• Mcm-2 expression pointed to correct diagnosis in 11 HCV infected patients with uncertain diagnosis – 7 HCV, 4 superimposed ACR (Unitt 2009)

Page 41: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Recurrent Hepatitis CAre there predictors of graft outcome?

• Can one identify risk factors that predispose to more severe disease (rapid progression to fibrosis/cirrhosis/graft failure) ?

• May have implications for donor/ patient selection prior to transplantation and for post-transplant management (e.g. selecting patients for anti-viral therapy)

Page 42: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Viral Factors HCV genotype (1b or 4)HCV-RNA levels (pre- and post-transplant)

Recipient Factors Age, female genderNon-white raceCo-infection with HIVIL-28b polymorphismTGF beta-1 polymorphism

Donor factors AgeWhite raceHLA mis-matchingHepatic iron concentrationSteatosis (controversial)Donation after cardiac death (DCD) (controversial)

Transplant-related factors

Perioperative warm and cold ischaemic times, preservation/reperfusion injury

Acute rejection severity and number of episodes

Immunosuppression amount/type of immunosuppression given rapid withdrawal of cortiocosteroids

Co-infection with herpesviruses (CMV, HHV-6)Metabolic syndrome/NAFLDBiliary complications

Recurrent HCV – Risk Factors for Severe/Progressive Disease

Page 43: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C In Liver AllograftsHistological Factors Predictive For Severe/Progressive Disease

(rapid progression to advanced fibrosis/cirrhosis)

1. Steatosis

2. Necro-inflammatory activity

3. Hepatocyte apoptosis/replicative senescence

4. Hepatic stellate cell activation

5. Early fibrosis

Page 44: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C In Liver AllograftsHistological Factors Predictive For Severe/Progressive Disease

(rapid progression to advanced fibrosis/cirrhosis)

1. Steatosis

• Presence/severity during 1st month (Pelletier 2000)

• Presence at 1 year (Ghabril 2011)

• May reflect viral factors (genotype 3) or host factors (NAFLD)

• Risk factor for poor response to anti-viral therapy (Testino 2011)

Page 45: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C In Liver AllograftsHistological Factors Predictive For Severe/Progressive Disease

(rapid progression to advanced fibrosis/cirrhosis)

2. Necro-inflammatory activity

• Severity at time of first presentation with HCV hepatitis

(during 1st 6 months) (Sreekumar 2000 , Guido 2003)

• Severity in protocol biopsies at 4-12 months also

predictive (Gane 1996, Prieto 1999, Firpi 2004)

Page 46: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C In Liver AllograftsHistological Factors Predictive For Severe/Progressive Disease

(rapid progression to advanced fibrosis/cirrhosis)

3. Hepatocyte apoptosis/replicative senescence

• Amount of hepatocyte apoptosis in stage F0 biopsies (Meriden 2010)

• Hepatocellular expression of senescence-associated beta galacosidase in biopsies during 1st year (Trak-Smyra 2004)

• Hepatocellular expression of cell cycle entry protein Mcm-2 in early biopsies (median 3 months) (Marshall 2005)

• Initial cell cycle entry Subsequent cell cycle arrest

Page 47: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C In Liver AllograftsHistological Factors Predictive For Severe/Progressive Disease

(rapid progression to advanced fibrosis/cirrhosis)

4. Hepatic stellate cell activation

Marker Predictive value/other comments

Smooth muscle actin

(Guido 1997, Carpino 2005, Gawrieh 2005, Russo 2005)

Numbers of SMA-positive cells in protocol biopsies (3-6 months) predicts development of fibrosis at 1-2 years

GFA P

(Carotti 2008)

GFAP – marker of early HSC activation% of GFAP-positive cells in early biopsies correlates with rate of fibrosis progression

Vimentin

(Meriden 2010)

Numbers of vimentin positive cells in stage F0 biopsies predicts rapid progression to F3/F4 fibrosis

Mainly portal/periportal , associated with ductular reaction (CK 19 positive cells)

“Slow fibroser”

4 month biopsy - immunostaining for SMA(from Russo 2005)

“Rapid fibroser”

Page 48: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Hepatitis C In Liver AllograftsHistological Factors Predictive For Severe/Progressive Disease

(rapid progression to advanced fibrosis/cirrhosis)

5.Early fibrosis

• Fibrosis stage (Ishak 2-3/6) at 1 year predicts progression to cirrhosis at 5 years (Firpi 2004)

• Fibrosis stage (Ishak > 2) at 1 year predicts progression to graft failure (Gallegos-Orozco 2009)

• Digital image analysis to measure collagen proportionate area (CPA) in Sirius red stained sections (Manousou 2011)

• CPA at one year strongly predictive for subsequent hepatic decompensation (better than Ishak stage or HVPG)

Page 49: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C – Summary & Conclusions

1. Liver biopsy continues to play an important role in the management of post-transplant HCV.

2. In most cases with typical features, biopsy mainly used to assess disease severity (fibrosis stage).

3. Cases with atypical features (e.g cholestatic HCV, HCV with “autoimmune features”) are more challenging and require careful clinico-pathological correlation. Implications for prognosis and treatment.

4. Hepatitis C and rejection frequently co-exist. Liver biopsy helps to identify the predominant cause of graft damage.

5. Some features seen in early biopsies (protocol or clinically-indicated) appear to be predictive of rapidly progressive graft injury . These may also have therapeutic implications (e.g. early use of anti viral therapy)

Page 50: Pathology of Recurrent Hepatitis C Diagnostic Problems and Differential Diagnosis: Are there Predictors of Graft Outcome? Stefan Hübscher, School of Cancer

Monday 28 April 2008