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Wilson's disease with severe hepatic insufficiency: beneficial effects of early administration of D-penicillamine. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Wilson's disease is a rare disorder causing severe liver failure, and emergency liver transplantation is typically the only effective treatment.
  • A study analyzed 17 patients with Wilson's disease, comparing outcomes between those who received early treatment with D-penicillamine and those who did not.
  • The findings suggest that early administration of D-penicillamine can lead to recovery in most patients without the need for liver transplantation, highlighting the importance of timely diagnosis and intervention.

Article Abstract

Background: Wilson's disease, heralded by severe hepatic insufficiency, is a rare disorder for which emergency liver transplantation is considered to be the only effective therapy.

Aims: To report the features of Wilson's disease with severe hepatic insufficiency in a series of 17 patients and, during the second period of the study, to assess the efficacy of a policy consisting of early administration of D-penicillamine.

Patients: Seventeen consecutive patients with Wilson's disease were studied. During the first period of the study (up to 1979), none of the patients received D-penicillamine. During the second period (after 1979), all patients without encephalopathy at admission received D-penicillamine.

Results: The four patients observed during the first period who did not have encephalopathy at admission and did not receive D-penicillamine progressed to encephalopathy and died. Among the 13 consecutive patients observed during the second period, two patients with encephalopathy at admission did not receive D-penicillamine and were transplanted. The 11 remaining patients all received D-penicillamine. Ten of these patients survived without the need for transplantation and returned to compensated liver disease without liver insufficiency. In one patient, liver insufficiency progressed and transplantation had to be performed.

Conclusions: In most patients with Wilson's disease heralded by severe hepatic insufficiency and without encephalopathy at admission, early administration of D-penicillamine was associated with survival without transplantation. These results suggest the importance of early diagnosis of this form of Wilson's disease before the onset of encephalopathy, and favour early administration of D-penicillamine which could avoid the need for transplantation in most cases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1728316PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/gut.48.6.849DOI Listing

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