@article{79b91bdb543a460d985c926aab01102d,
title = "Longitudinal Outcomes in Young Patients with Alpha-1-Antitrypsin Deficiency with Native Liver Reveal that Neonatal Cholestasis is a Poor Predictor of Future Portal Hypertension",
abstract = "Objectives: To identify predictors of portal hypertension, liver transplantation, and death in North American youth with alpha-1-antitrypsin (AAT) deficiency, and compare with patients with AAT deficiency elsewhere. Study design: The Childhood Liver Disease Research Network Longitudinal Observational Study of Genetic Causes of Intrahepatic Cholestasis is a prospective, cohort study of pediatric cholestatic liver diseases, including AAT deficiency, enrolling PIZZ and PISZ subjects 0-25 years of age seen since November 2007 at 17 tertiary care centers in the US and Canada. Data from standard-of-care baseline and annual follow-up visits were recorded from medical records, history, physical examination, and laboratory studies. Participants with portal hypertension were identified based on data collected. Results: We enrolled 350 participants (60% male) with a native liver; 278 (79%) entered the cohort without portal hypertension and 18 developed portal hypertension during follow-up. Thirty participants required liver transplantation; 2 patients died during 1077 person-years of follow-up. There was no difference in participants with or without preceding neonatal cholestasis progressing to transplantation or death during the study (12% vs 7%; P =.09), or in experiencing portal hypertension (28% vs 21%; P =.16); the hazard ratio for neonatal cholestasis leading to portal hypertension was P =.04. Development of portal hypertension was associated with a reduced height Z-score. Conclusions: Portal hypertension in youth with AAT deficiency impacts growth measures. Progression to liver transplantation is slow and death is rare, but the risk of complications and severe liver disease progression persists throughout childhood. A history of neonatal cholestasis is a weak predictor of severe disease.",
keywords = "cirrhosis, jaundice, liver enzymes, liver transplant, metabolic liver disease",
author = "{ChiLDReN (Childhood Liver Disease Research Network)} and Jeffrey Teckman and Philip Rosenthal and Kieran Hawthorne and Cathie Spino and Bass, {Lee M.} and Murray, {Karen F.} and Nanda Kerkar and Magee, {John C.} and Saul Karpen and Heubi, {James E.} and Molleston, {Jean P.} and Squires, {Robert H.} and Kamath, {Binita M.} and Guthery, {Stephen L.} and Loomes, {Kathleen M.} and Sherker, {Averell H.} and Sokol, {Ronald J.} and Estella Alonso and Lee Bass and Susan Kelly and Mary Riordan and Hector Melin-Aldana and Jorge Bezerra and Kevin Bove and James Heubi and Alexander Miethke and Greg Tiao and Julie Denlinger and Erin Chapman and Ronald Sokol and Amy Feldman and Cara Mack and Michael Narkewicz and Frederick Suchy and Shikha Sundaram and {Van Hove}, Johan and Benigno Garcia and Mikaela Kauma and Kendra Kocher and Matthew Steinbeiss and Mark Lovell and Kathleen Loomes and David Piccoli and Elizabeth Rand and Pierre Russo and Nancy Spinner and Jessi Erlichman and Samantha Stalford and Dina Pakstis and Sakya King",
note = "Funding Information: Supported by funding from the Alpha-1 Foundation (University of Colorado Denver and Saint Louis University School of Medicine) and by U01 grants from the National Institute of Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Diseases and UL1 grants from the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS): DK 62445 [Mt. Sinai School of Medicine], DK 62497 and UL1 TR000077 [Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, University of Cincinnati], DK103149 [Texas Children's Hospital], DK 62470 [Children{\textquoteright}s Healthcare of Atlanta, Emory University], DK 62481 and UL1 TR000003 [The Children{\textquoteright}s Hospital of Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania], DK 62456 [University of Michigan], DK 84536 and UL1 TR000006 [Riley Hospital for Children, Indiana University], DK 84575 and UL1 TR000423 [Seattle Children's Hospital, University of Washington], DK 62500 and UL1 TR000004 [UCSF Children{\textquoteright}s Hospital, University of California, San Francisco], DK 62503 and UL1 TR000424 [Johns Hopkins School of Medicine], DK 62466 and UL1 TR000005 [Children{\textquoteright}s Hospital of Pittsburgh, University of Pittsburgh], DK 62453 and UL1 TR002535 [University of Colorado Denver, Children{\textquoteright}s Hospital Colorado], DK 62452 and UL1 TR000448 [Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, St. Louis Children{\textquoteright}s Hospital], DK 84538 and UL1 TR000130 [Children{\textquoteright}s Hospital Los Angeles, University of Southern California], DK 62436 and UL1 TR000150 [Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children{\textquoteright}s Hospital of Chicago, Northwestern University], DK103140 [University of Utah], DK103135 [Hospital for Sick Children (Toronto). J.T. has grants from NIH, Arrowhead, Dicerna, Vertex, and provides consulting for Arrowhead, Dicerna, Vertex, KorroBio, Camp4, Takada, and the Alpha-1 Foundation. P.R. has grants from Gilead, Abbvie, Merck, Retrophin; and provides consulting for Gilead, Abbvie, Retrophin, Audentes, Albireo, and Mirum. C.S. worked as a statistical consultant for Albireo from 6 Feb 2018 to 14 Feb 2019. K.M. serves as a consultant for Albireo and Gilead. N.K. served on the High Tide advisory panel (one occasion) in 2019; she receives a royalty from Elsevier on the Wilson Disease book, which she co-edited with Eve Roberts. S.K. is a consultant for Albireo, Intercept, Mirum, Retrophin, and Spruce Bioscience. J.M. has funded research from Gillead, Abbvie, and Mirum. L.B. is on the speakers bureau of Mead Johnson Nutrition and is a consultant for Horizon Pharmaceuticals. B.K. is a consultant for Mirum, Shire, and Albireo; she has an unrestricted grant from Mirum. K.L. is a consultant for Mirum and Albireo. R.J.S. is a consultant for Retrophin, Albireo, and Mirum. J.H. is consultant to Mirum and Retrophin and has equity interest in Asklepion Pharmaceuticals, LLC. The remaining authors declare no conflicts of interest. A.S. is an employee of NIH. The study sponsors did not have a role in study design; collection, analysis, and interpretation of data; writing of the report; or the decision to submit the paper for publication. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2020 Elsevier Inc.",
year = "2020",
month = dec,
doi = "10.1016/j.jpeds.2020.07.031",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "227",
pages = "81--86.e4",
journal = "journal of pediatrics",
issn = "0022-3476",
publisher = "Mosby Inc.",
}