[Laboratory diagnostics of autoimmune liver diseases in primary care settings - short review].

Dtsch Med Wochenschr

Praxis für Gastroenterologie, Hepatologie und Allgemeinmedizin, Hauptstr. 30, 71154 Nufringen.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • * In 2022, about 50-60 out of every 100,000 PCP patients were diagnosed with autoimmune hepatitis or primary biliary cholangitis, with women being diagnosed 2 to 6 times more frequently than men.
  • * The article concludes that while laboratory diagnostics are crucial for diagnosing these liver diseases, general screening for ELE is not recommended due to the complexity and lack of validated figures in primary care, suggesting a more targeted approach for interpreting laboratory results.

Article Abstract

Background And Aims:  Elevated liver enzymes (ELE) are common in Germany. Primary care physicians are paramount in the early detection of liver diseases. The aim of this article is to provide an overview of autoimmune liver disease for primary care physicians (PCP) with a focus on laboratory diagnostics.

Methods:  The national and international guidelines and review articles serve as a reference, supplemented by the current prevalence data from the German Zentralinstitut of the kassenärztliche Vereinigung (ZI).

Results:  In 2022, of the approximately 59 million PCP patients aged 20 years and older, around 50-60/100 000 received a confirmed diagnosis of autoimmune hepatitis or primary biliary cholangitis (according to ICD-10-GM diagnosis). The diagnoses were made 2 to 6 times more frequently in women than in men. Primary sclerosing cholangitis occurred in around 10/100 000 people treated by PCPs; women were affected up to twice as often, especially from the age of 60. Data on etiology, clinical, laboratory and diagnostic parameters, treatment options and prognosis data for the 3 disease entities are presented concisely in this article.

Conclusion:  Laboratory diagnostics is the central step in the diagnosis of autoimmune liver diseases. However, general laboratory screening for ELE is not advisable. Rather, it is important to recognize, that no validated key figures are yet available for these markers in the primary care setting. The interpretation of these laboratory values is therefore complex. It is therefore advisable to consider determining these specific laboratory parameters, taking into account the common (and less common) causes that can lead to ELE.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-2367-9603DOI Listing

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