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acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
adenosine triphosphate
classic Kaposi sarcoma
cytomegalovirus
Epstein-Barr virus
endoscopic retrograde pancreatography
electron transport chain
hematoxylin and eosin [stain]
highly active antiretroviral therapy
hepatitis B virus
hepatitis C virus
human herpesvirus 8
human immunodeficiency virus
hemophagocyte lymphohistiocytosis
interferon
Kaposi sarcoma
Mycobacterium avium complex
nonalcoholic steatohepatitis
non-Hodgkin lymphoma
non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor
nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor
periodic acid–Schiff
protease inhibitor
reactive oxygen species
tumor necrosis factor
Infection by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) represents a universal public health problem. In 2014, it was estimated that 36.9 million people were affected worldwide by the virus. Mortality and morbidity vary widely over the globe. In countries with low socioeconomic conditions and poor health care infrastructure, infections and a relentlessly progressive course are the norm. In developed countries, effective prophylaxis of infections and availability of the highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) have dramatically decreased morbidity and increased survival by at least 10 years. In these countries, as individuals infected with HIV lead longer and healthier lives, concomitant chronic liver diseases such as hepatitis C infection have emerged as significant comorbid factors presenting challenges in treatment and management.
The aim of HAART is to prevent viral replication, reconstitute the immune system, and slow down disease progression. Currently, HAART includes six classes of drugs: nucleoside/nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs); non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs); protease inhibitors (PI); fusion inhibitors (enfuvirtide); CCR5 inhibitor (maraviroc) and integrase inhibitor (raltegravir, elvitegravir). Although morbidity and mortality attributed to opportunistic diseases and neoplasia associated with HIV have diminished significantly, morbidity related to drug-induced side effects and idiosyncratic reactions have increased. These include hepatotoxicity, cardiovascular diseases, and dyslipidemia. However, the net beneficial effect of anti-HIV therapy is undisputed.
The risk of hepatotoxicity in patients receiving HAART is between 3% and 12%, depending on the drug used; the most commonly offending drugs are the NRTIs. Antiretrovirals can cause a wide range of hepatic lesions such as steatosis, hepatitis, liver failure, mitochondria toxicity with lactic acidosis, and insulin resistance.
Four basic mechanisms are responsible for the hepatotoxicity of HAART ( Table 17.1 ) :
Parenchymal hepatic steatosis, caused by multiple pathogenic mechanisms, including metabolic syndrome and hepatocyte mitochondrial toxicity (leading to lactic acidosis). This mechanism is frequently related to NRTIs.
Direct hepatocyte toxicity caused by uncertain mechanisms but believed to be due to formation of toxic metabolites leading to idiosyncratic reactions. This type of injury is most commonly associated with the use of protease inhibitors.
Hypersensitivity reactions noticed with particular drug combinations such as nevirapine, efavirenz (NNRTI); abacavir (NRTI); and amprenavir (PI).
Liver injury attributed to immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS) caused by decrease in viremia and rebound in numbers of CD4+ T lymphocytes. This picture is most frequently seen in patients who are coinfected with hepatitis B virus (HBV)–HIV and in whom the CD4+ T-lymphocyte count is not very low.
Patterns of Hepatotoxicity | Drugs |
---|---|
Idiosyncratic reaction | Nevirapine, protease inhibitors, maraviroc |
Hypersensitivity reaction | Nevirapine, abacavir, etravirine, ritonavir, enfuvirtide (T20) |
Mitochondrial toxicity | Didanosine, stavudine (d4T), zidovudine, abacavir, tenofovir, lamivudine, emtricitabine ∗ |
Steatosis | Nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs), nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs), protease inhibitors |
Immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome | Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) |
Elevated serum transaminases | Sulfonamides, statins, isoniazid, rifampicin, pyrazinamide, acyclovir, ganciclovir, ketoconazole, fluconazole |
Elevated serum bilirubin | Acyclovir |
Elevated alkaline phosphatase | Sulphonamides, macrolides, dapsone, ethambutol |
Inhibits cytochrome P450 | Ketoconazole, fluconazole, macrolides |
∗ The propensity for mitochondrial toxicity in decreasing order of risk is: didanosine, stavudine, zidovudine, followed by abacavir, tenofovir, lamivudine, and emtricitabine, which have similar risks.
The effects of the HIV on organ systems are twofold. First, the virus causes infections and tumors because of progressive damage to the host’s immune system. Second, the virus is capable of causing direct organ damage that is specific to that organ and depends to a large extent on its functions and physiology. It is thus pertinent that the liver is a peripheral immune organ with distinct immunologic properties and that HIV messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) has been demonstrated in Kupffer cells, endothelial sinusoidal cells, hepatic stellate cells, as well as viral genetic material in hepatocytes. As a part of the body’s innate immune response, the liver is in a permanent state of preparedness involved in acute-phase protein production, nonspecific phagocytosis, nonspecific cell death, and disposal of effete cells. The liver is also crucial to adaptive immunity through its role in deletion of activated T cells, tolerance induction to ingested and autoantigens, and extrathymic T-cell proliferation. It has been our experience that, when assessing the response of a patient infected with HIV to an infectious agent, the findings in the peripheral blood do not necessarily reflect the disease in the liver. These observations are corroborated by recent reports, which point out that responses to an immunologic challenge are organ-specific and adapted to maintain that organ’s functional physiology.
Approximately 80% of patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) present abnormal liver function tests at some point during the evolution of their disease and around two-thirds have hepatomegaly. The liver biopsy has an important diagnostic role in the assessment of liver function abnormalities and in the management of hepatotoxicity in patients undergoing treatment with HAART. As in all cases, the biopsy carried out in HIV/AIDS-infected patients must meet all the internationally accepted criteria of adequacy, namely a length of greater than 1.5 × 0.1 cm and containing at least 10 complete portal spaces. Initial histologic assessment should include sections stained by hematoxylin and eosin (H&E), Masson, periodic acid-Schiff (PAS), and reticulin stains. In addition, an acid alcohol stain such as Ziehl-Neelsen stain and a silver stain such as Grocott methenamine silver stain are needed to detect acid-fast bacilli and fungi, even in the absence of specific findings on H&E stain. Other stains such as Gram and Warthin-Starry stains may be needed in specific cases. The liver biopsy is a sensitive method for early diagnosis of opportunistic diseases because it allows an in situ demonstration of an infectious agent or its specific products. Serology is of limited use in these patients because immune responses may be compromised by HIV infection; furthermore, the clinical picture and histologic features may be atypical or uncharacteristic for the same reasons.
A liver biopsy from a patient with HIV or AIDS may demonstrate one of 12 possible histologic patterns. Recognition of the predominant pattern helps to identify the specific pathologic process underlying liver dysfunction ( Table 17.2 ). Steatosis is the most common alteration, and both macrovesicular and microvesicular steatosis may occur in any of the 11 non-neoplastic patterns. Besides drug toxicity and HIV infection itself, steatosis in these patients may be related to comorbidities such as metabolic syndrome and coinfections with hepatotropic viruses.
Main Histologic Pattern | Diagnostic Consideration |
---|---|
Pattern of reactivity of the endothelial reticulum system | HIV infection (basic liver reactivity to HIV) Visceral leishmaniasis Histoplasmosis Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis ( eSlide 1.12 ) |
Cholangiopathy pattern | AIDS-related infections of biliary tree |
Steatohepatitis pattern | HIV infection Coinfection with hepatitis E virus Other comorbidities (obesity, diabetes) HAART therapy Drug-induced liver injury |
Chronic hepatitis pattern | Coinfection with hepatitis B, hepatitis C, and/or hepatitis E viruses |
Hepatitic pattern with multifocal parenchymal necrosis | Cytomegalovirus Herpesvirus Toxoplasmosis Pneumocystis infection ( eSlide 17.1 ) |
Granulomatous inflammation pattern | Mycobacterial infections ( eSlide 19.1 ) Mycoses Visceral leishmaniasis Drug-induced liver injury |
Bacterial infection pattern (abscesses including microabscesses) | Bacterial infections (Escherichia coli , Klebsiella, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus ) |
Fibrogenic pattern (pericellular, perisinusoidal, portal, periportal) | HIV infection Coinfection with hepatitis B, hepatitis C, and/or hepatitis E viruses HAART therapy Other comorbidities (alcohol, metabolic syndrome) |
Vascular lesions | Peliosis Bacillary angiomatosis Obliterative portal venopathy Veno-occlusive disease Nodular regenerative hyperplasia |
Mitochondriopathy pattern | HIV infection Drug-induced liver injury |
Acute hepatitis, cholestatic hepatitis | HAART therapy Coinfection or superinfection by hepatotropic or nonhepatotropic viruses Drug-induced liver injury |
HIV-associated neoplasia | Kaposi sarcoma ( eSlide 17.2 ) AIDS-associated lymphomas |
Reactivity of the reticuloendothelial system is characterized primarily by prominence of Kupffer cells. Other features such as focal, mild lobular, and portal inflammation are present but not prominent. This pattern indicates one of 4 possibilities: (1) opportunistic infection of Kupffer cells by microorganisms such as Leishmania , Histoplasma and Trypanosoma ; (2) nonspecific reactive hepatitis caused by a systemic infection or infection at a distant site without direct involvement of the liver; (3) hemophagocytosis syndrome; and (4) infection of the liver by HIV itself (basic liver reactivity to HIV).
Although HIV does not cause distinctive microscopic lesions in the liver, a constellation of histologic findings representing reactivity of the liver to the presence of virus has been reported in biopsy and necropsy studies by several authors ( Fig. 17.1 ). This spectrum is seen in patients with HIV/AIDS who have not undergone any type of treatment and who do not have hepatic or systemic infections, and therefore solely represents a response of the liver to the presence of HIV within the organ. Patients may have increased biochemical liver tests. Although common, these HIV-dependent hepatic manifestations are rarely fatal and patients do not usually develop liver failure.
Microscopically, the histologic findings of HIV-dependent liver reactivity include:
Diffuse hyperplasia and hypertrophy of Kupffer cells, showing increased cytoplasmic and nuclear volume. The PAS stain shows PAS-positive granules indicating increased phagocytic activity.
Foci of narrowing of sinusoidal lumen, which correspond to widening of the Disse by increased reticulin fibers. Frequently, these areas alternate with areas of sinusoidal dilation.
Small foci of mononuclear lobular inflammatory infiltrate.
Occasionally, non-necrotizing microgranulomas, which are negative for microorganisms.
Variable degree of hepatocellular steatosis.
Increase in lipofuscin pigment in hepatocytes.
Multifocal areas of hemosiderosis in Kupffer cells, sinusoidal endothelial cells, and portal macrophages.
Portal tracts with edema and mononuclear inflammatory infiltrate.
Presence of antigens (p24) and viral particles (HIV) in Kupffer cells and endothelial cells.
Large cell changes in approximately 50% of the cases.
Bile duct injury (necrosis and inflammation) in the absence of other possible causes.
We have observed the following ultrastructural alterations in these biopsies:
Increased volume of Kupffer cells with massive nuclei and abundant cytoplasm showing signs of intense phagocytic activity with numerous phagolysosomes.
Increased lipofuscin pigment and autophagic vacuoles in hepatocytes distributed irregularly within the lobule.
Increased volume of stellate cells (Ito cells) with ramified cytoplasmic processes, numerous fat vacuoles, and increased granular endoplasmic reticulum.
Increased perisinusoidal space (or Disse space) containing amorphous electrodense nonfibrillar material, deposited among thin fibers laid down haphazardly in several directions and small collections of collagen fibers.
Visceral leishmaniasis occurring against a background of AIDS affects predominantly men who have sex with men (MSM) and intravenous drug users, as a reactivation of latent infection. The clinical presentation is not characteristic of visceral leishmaniasis described outside the setting of AIDS; thus, isolated symptoms occur, such as fever and lymphadenopathy, which are not always accompanied by hepatosplenomegaly and pancytopenia. Disseminated infection, affecting unusual sites (eg, the skin); concomitant opportunistic infections; lower therapy response; development of drug resistance and high rates of recurrence after treatment are common pictures in the leishmaniasis in AIDS patients. Serum antibodies against Leishmania are often negative (more than 40%).
The histopathologic diagnosis is suspected when there is marked hypertrophy and hyperplasia of Kupffer cells. The organisms may be seen on an H&E stain as tiny basophilic particulate matter within Kupffer cells ( Fig. 17.2 and eSlide 18.5 ) and are better visualized on a Giemsa stain, which demonstrates a “dot and dash” pattern representing the nucleus and kinetoplast, respectively. Organisms are also seen within portal macrophages. Intralobular and portal mononuclear inflammatory infiltrates, with a predominance of plasma cells, are seen. There is no damage to the limiting plate, and significant hepatocyte necrosis is not present. There may be macrovesicular or microvesicular steatosis distributed randomly within the lobule.
When H&E and Giemsa stains do not suffice in delineating the morphology of the organisms, immunohistochemistry (see Fig. 17.2 ) and polymerase chain reaction may be necessary to establish the diagnosis. Other microorganisms that infect Kupffer cells and produce a similar histologic picture are Histoplasma (see eSlide 19.5 ), which can be identified by silver stains such as Grocott methenamine silver or by immunohistochemistry, and Trypanosoma in acute or reactivated Chagas disease, which can be identified by immunohistochemistry or molecular methods.
HIV can precipitate hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH), both in the presence and absence of concurrent infections and malignancy. The onset of HLH in patients with HIV in the absence of an infection or malignancy suggests an independent role of the virus in at least some cases. Other studies have reported HLH as the initial presentation in patients infected by the HIV virus, and in others, it has been associated with immune reconstitution.
A rare and frequently fatal disease in spite of treatment, HLH is caused by the dysregulation of natural killer T-cell function, which results in uncontrolled and ineffective immune activation. This in turn leads to activation and proliferation of lymphocytes and histiocytes with uncontrolled hemophagocytosis and overproduction of cytokines, causing cell damage and multiorgan dysfunction and failure. The process affects the entire reticuloendothelial system, causing pancytopenia, hepatosplenomegaly, and lymphadenopathy.
HLH is considered to be primary when there is no obvious underlying cause. Most often, the syndrome occurs secondary to underlying infections or malignancy; known associations include viruses (herpes simplex virus, varicella-zoster virus, cytomegalovirus [CMV], Epstein-Barr virus [EBV], human herpesvirus 6, human herpesvirus 8 [HHV-8], HIV, adenovirus, influenza virus, hepatotropic virus); bacteria (mycobacterium, spirochetes); fungi; protozoa; and malignant diseases. The primary form is often familial and is thought to have a genetic basis. However, an underlying genetic propensity to immune dysfunction probably underlies all forms of HLH.
The diagnosis of HLH is based on clinical and laboratory evidence and on histopathologic findings. The main symptoms are fever and splenomegaly; jaundice, hepatomegaly, lymphadenopathy, rash, and neurologic alterations are also frequent. The main laboratory finding is cytopenia, which affects more than two cell lines and is characterized by hemoglobin 9 g/dL or less, platelets less than 100,000/μL, and neutrophils less than 1000 cells/μL. Also variably observed are hypertriglyceridemia and/or hypofibrinogenemia, hyperferritinemia, low or absent natural killer cell cytotoxicity, and increase in soluble CD25.
Histologic diagnosis is made on tissue biopsy by the finding of hemophagocytosis in activated macrophages, which contain leukocytes, erythrocytes, and platelets. Hemophagocytosis can be observed in several organs and tissues including the bone marrow, lymph nodes, liver, and spleen. In the liver, there is marked Kupffer cell hypertrophy and hyperplasia, which contain erythrocytes and lymphocytes (see Fig. 17.2 ) (see eSlide 1.12 ). Variable degrees of cholestasis may be seen. Hemosiderin is present to a variable degree in Kupffer cells and hepatocytes. There may be mononuclear inflammatory infiltrate in portal spaces, which does not destroy the limiting plate.
Liver biopsies from patients with AIDS may show a pattern resembling that seen in biliary tract obstruction. This pattern is characterized by cholestasis in the perivenular zone, edematous small portal tracts, ductular reaction, bile plugs, and occasional bile infarcts. Periportal fibrosis may be seen. This pattern corresponds to AIDS cholangiopathy, which occurs as a consequence of infection and damage to the biliary tract, most notably by CMV, Cryptosporidium , Microsporidium , Cyclospora cayetanensis , Giardia , Isospora , and Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC). AIDS cholangiopathy, which typically presents at an advanced stage of the disease when CD4+ T lymphocyte counts are below 135/μL, has a poor prognosis. The lesion has become rare since HAART was introduced for the management of HIV infection. The clinical features include right upper or epigastric abdominal pain, nausea, diarrhea, fever, weight loss, and occasionally jaundice. Blood tests reveal increased alkaline phosphatase and gamma-glutamyl transferase levels. Endoscopic retrograde pancreatography (ERCP) is a diagnostic and therapeutic method. Ultrasound can be also useful.
On imaging, AIDS cholangiopathy can mimic primary sclerosing cholangitis. Three types of alterations are described: papillary stenosis with sclerosing cholangitis, isolated papillary stenosis, and major biliary duct involvement without intrahepatic disease. The combination of major bile duct involvement and papillary stenosis is characteristic of AIDS cholangiopathy. Differential diagnosis includes septicemia, drug-induced hepatotoxicity, mitochondriopathies, and obstruction of bile ducts by cholelithiasis or neoplasia. Sphincterotomy of the papilla of Vater can be performed during ERCP and ameliorate the symptoms. However, the ultimate treatment for AIDS-cholangiopathy consists of HAART.
Steatosis is a common finding in biopsies from patients infected with HIV (40% to 70%), especially in patients with comorbidities such as hepatitis C infection, diabetes mellitus, and obesity. Although several of these conditions are prevalent in the general population and not necessarily related to AIDS, two situations pertinent to HIV infection are steatosis in patients coinfected with hepatitis C virus (HCV) and steatosis due to antiretroviral therapy.
Sterling and colleagues demonstrated that nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is relatively common (26%) in HIV/HCV coinfection, important for the pathogenesis of liver disease, and associated with an increased risk of the development of advanced fibrosis. They identified body mass index, diabetes, and genotype 3 of the HCV as risk factors but did not find an independent association with the use of antiretroviral drugs. HIV-infected patients with NASH exhibit increased γ-glutamyl transpeptidase and insulin resistance. Histologic assessment of all cases with these risk factors was recommended. In a recent report, Morse and colleagues detected NASH in 34 out of 62 (55%) patients infected with HIV, without HBV or HCV coinfection and other known causes, with persistent aminotransferase elevation. Association of NASH and bridging fibrosis was found in 10 cases (16%). The risk factors for NASH and fibrosis were insulin resistance, obesity, and presence of 2 minor alleles in the PNPLA3 gene.
Liver biopsy is required to confirm or rule out the diagnosis as well as determine the severity of damage ( Fig. 17.3 ). The differential histologic diagnosis includes all causes of steatosis that may be seen in patients not infected with HIV. Antiretroviral therapy is an important cause of steatosis and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis in HIV-infected patients; it has been reported that NRTIs cause dose-dependent hepatotoxicity.
The pattern of disease in patients with HIV coinfected with HCV or HBV is generally similar to that in chronic hepatitis C and B monoinfections, respectively. However, the interaction of the hepatotropic viruses with HIV affects the natural history and progression of these diseases as well as their response to therapy. Worldwide, it is estimated that 370 million people are infected with HBV; 130 to 177 million also have HCV, and more than 36 million have HIV.
HCV infection is currently considered one of the most significant opportunistic infections in patients infected with HIV and represents a crucial comorbid factor in this population. Serologic studies have shown that 15% to 30% of patients with HIV are also positive for HCV. Patients coinfected with HIV/HCV have an accelerated course of progression to cirrhosis and terminal liver disease, when compared with patients infected with HCV alone. When comparing the two groups, Allory and associates observed higher METAVIR activity scores in coinfected patients than in those infected with HCV alone. The same study showed that cirrhosis was more frequent in patients with 200 cells/μL or less CD4+ T lymphocytes compared with HIV-negative patients. The role of immune effectors cells in the progression of liver fibrosis in HCV is not well known. However, several studies have observed that low levels of peripheral CD4+ T lymphocytes are associated with faster progression of the liver disease in patients infected with HIV/HCV; the possibility that CD4+ T lymphocytes may have a protective role against progression of fibrosis has therefore been suggested. On the other hand, studies have shown that in spite of a decrease in CD4+ T lymphocytes, including in the intrahepatic compartment, the tissue response with interferon (IFN)-γ is maintained. An increase in the production of inflammatory cytokines of the Th1 pathway has been noted, particularly those with significant fibrogenic role that target not only hepatocytes, but also Kupffer cells and stellate cells.
The histologic picture is similar to that described for chronic hepatitis C infection ( Fig. 17.4 ), although the disease may be more active. Fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis and multinucleated giant cells (syncytial cells) have been described. In addition, other pathologic conditions associated with HIV infection may be superimposed on the chronic hepatitis.
The prevalence of HBV coinfection in patients infected with HIV is estimated to be 5% to 10%, a much smaller number compared with the 15% to 30% of patients with both HIV and HCV. However, studies have demonstrated higher mortality rates in patients coinfected with HBV, especially those who are hepatitis B surface antibody–positive. When evaluating liver disease-associated mortality in HIV-positive patients, Salmon-Ceron and coworkers demonstrated that HIV/HBV -infected patients accounted for one fifth of all deaths, with 88% of deaths being attributed to decompensated cirrhosis and 15% caused by hepatocellular carcinoma. It is noteworthy that patients with HIV/HBV accounted for 50% of all cases of hepatocellular carcinoma.
The aim of treatment in HIV/HBV coinfection is to suppress viral replication and HBV DNA production, promote seroconversion, normalize transaminases, and reduce or abolish histologic activity. Patients who are hepatitis B surface antibody–positive with detectable HBV DNA and elevated transaminase levels are candidates for treatment. Several guidelines have been published for the correct management and treatment of coinfected patients. Adequate workup of clinical and laboratory parameters, as well as pathologic staging and grading, is recommended before initiation of therapy. The histologic picture is that of chronic hepatitis with the characteristics of HBV infection ( Fig. 17.5 ); there may be a variable degree of steatosis.
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