Mortality in patients with alcoholic hepatitis (AH) remains high, and although corticosteroids are widely used for treatment, the results vary considerably. In AH, neutrophils are primed and infiltrate the liver to produce injury, but paradoxically, the main cause of death in such patients is infection. Our prospective study addressed this paradox of primed neutrophils on the one hand and increased risk of infection on the other. We hypothesized that the full activation of neutrophils by a humoral factor such as endotoxin renders them unable to respond to further bacterial challenge. We analyzed neutrophil oxidative burst and phagocytosis in whole blood by fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis in 63 alcoholic patients with cirrhosis and patients with cirrhosis with superimposed AH (cirrhosis؉AH). In 16 patients, ex vivo studies determined whether the removal of endotoxin restored neutrophil function. A resting burst greater than or equal to 5%, indicating neutrophil activation and a reduced phagocytic capacity lower than 42%, was associated with significantly greater risk of infection, organ failure, and mortality. This defective neutrophil function was transmissible through patients' plasma to normal neutrophils, and patients' neutrophil function could be restored by normal plasma. The ex vivo removal of endotoxin from patients' plasma decreased the resting burst and increased the phagocytic function. Conclusions: Our study provides the rationale for a goal-directed approach to the management of patients with cirrhosis and AH, in which the assessment of neutrophil function may be an important biomarker to select patients for immunosuppressive therapy. The neutrophil dysfunction in cirrhosis and AH is reversible, with endotoxin-removal strategies providing new targets for intervention. (HEPATOLOGY 2007;46:831-840.)
This study explores the hypothesis that the inflammatory response induced by administration of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) exacerbates brain edema in cirrhotic rats; and if so whether this is associated with altered brain metabolism of ammonia or anatomical disturbance of the blood-brain barrier. Adult Sprague-Dawley rats 4 weeks after bile duct ligation (BDL)/ Sham-operation, or naïve rats fed a hyperammonemic diet (HD), were injected with LPS (0.5 mg/kg, intraperitoneally) or saline, and killed 3 hours later. LPS administration increased brain water in HD, BDL, and sham-operated groups significantly (P < 0.05), but this was associated with progression to pre-coma stages only in BDL rats. LPS induced cytotoxic brain swelling and maintained anatomical integrity of the blood-brain barrier. Plasma/brain ammonia levels were higher in HD and BDL rats than in sham-operated controls and did not change with LPS administration. Brain glutamine/myoinositol ratio was increased in the HD group but reduced in the BDL animals. There was a background pro-inflammatory cytokine response in the brains of cirrhotic rats, and plasma/brain tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-␣) and IL-6 significantly increased in LPS-treated animals. Plasma nitrite/nitrate levels increased significantly in LPS groups compared with non-LPS controls; however, frontal cortex nitrotyrosine levels only increased in the BDL ؉ LPS rats (P < 0.005 versus BDL controls). Conclusion: Injection of LPS into cirrhotic rats induces pre-coma and exacerbates cytotoxic edema because of the synergistic effect of hyperammonemia and the induced inflammatory response. Although the exact mechanism of how hyperammonemia and LPS facilitate cytotoxic edema and pre-coma in cirrhosis is not clear, our data support an important role for the nitrosation of brain proteins. (HEPATOLOGY 2007;45: 1517-1526
Background/aimsIntestinal permeability with systemic distribution of bacterial products are central in the immunopathogenesis of alcoholic liver disease (ALD), yet links with intestinal immunity remain elusive. Mucosa-associated invariant T cells (MAIT) are found in liver, blood and intestinal mucosa and are a key component of antibacterial host defences. Their role in ALD is unknown.Methods/designWe analysed frequency, phenotype, transcriptional regulation and function of blood MAIT cells in severe alcoholic hepatitis (SAH), alcohol-related cirrhosis (ARC) and healthy controls (HC). We also examined direct impact of ethanol, bacterial products from faecal extracts and antigenic hyperstimulation on MAIT cell functionality. Presence of MAIT cells in colon and liver was assessed by quantitative PCR and immunohistochemistry/gene expression respectively.ResultsIn ARC and SAH, blood MAIT cells were dramatically depleted, hyperactivated and displayed defective antibacterial cytokine/cytotoxic responses. These correlated with suppression of lineage-specific transcription factors and hyperexpression of homing receptors in the liver with intrahepatic preservation of MAIT cells in ALD. These alterations were stronger in SAH, where surrogate markers of bacterial infection and microbial translocation were higher than ARC. Ethanol exposure in vitro, in vivo alcohol withdrawal and treatment with Escherichia coli had no effect on MAIT cell frequencies, whereas exposure to faecal bacteria/antigens induced functional impairments comparable with blood MAIT cells from ALD and significant MAIT cell depletion, which was not observed in other T cell compartments.ConclusionsIn ALD, the antibacterial potency of MAIT cells is compromised as a consequence of contact with microbial products and microbiota, suggesting that the ‘leaky’ gut observed in ALD drives MAIT cell dysfunction and susceptibility to infection in these patients.
Our data show that inflammation is an important determinant of the presence and severity of MHE. The change in neuropsychological function following induced hyperammonemia is greater in those with more severe inflammation.
BACKGROUNDInfection and increased systemic inflammation cause organ dysfunction and death in patients with decompensated cirrhosis. Preclinical studies provide support for an antiinflammatory role of albumin, but confirmatory large-scale clinical trials are lacking. Whether targeting a serum albumin level of 30 g per liter or greater in these patients with repeated daily infusions of 20% human albumin solution, as compared with standard care, would reduce the incidences of infection, kidney dysfunction, and death is unknown. METHODSWe conducted a randomized, multicenter, open-label, parallel-group trial involving hospitalized patients with decompensated cirrhosis who had a serum albumin level of less than 30 g per liter at enrollment. Patients were randomly assigned to receive either targeted 20% human albumin solution for up to 14 days or until discharge, whichever came first, or standard care. Treatment commenced within 3 days after admission. The composite primary end point was new infection, kidney dysfunction, or death between days 3 and 15 after the initiation of treatment. RESULTSA total of 777 patients underwent randomization, and alcohol was reported to be a cause of cirrhosis in most of these patients. A median total infusion of albumin of 200 g (interquartile range, 140 to 280) per patient was administered to the targeted albumin group (increasing the albumin level to ≥30 g per liter), as compared with a median of 20 g (interquartile range, 0 to 120) per patient administered to the standard-care group (adjusted mean difference, 143 g; 95% confidence interval [CI], 127 to 158.2). The percentage of patients with a primary end-point event did not differ significantly between the targeted albumin group (113 of 380 patients [29.7%]) and the standard-care group (120 of 397 patients [30.2%]) (adjusted odds ratio, 0.98; 95% CI, 0.71 to 1.33; P = 0.87). A time-to-event analysis in which data were censored at the time of discharge or at day 15 also showed no significant between-group difference (hazard ratio, 1.04; 95% CI, 0.81 to 1.35). More severe or life-threatening serious adverse events occurred in the albumin group than in the standard-care group. CONCLUSIONSIn patients hospitalized with decompensated cirrhosis, albumin infusions to increase the albumin level to a target of 30 g per liter or more was not more beneficial than the current standard care in the United Kingdom.
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