Percutaneous liver biopsy and chronic liver disease in haemophiliacs
- PMID: 80524
- DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(78)92821-0
Percutaneous liver biopsy and chronic liver disease in haemophiliacs
Abstract
Systematic screening of forty-seven haemophiliacs in Sheffield revealed abnormal liver-function tests in thirty-six (77%), with a tendency for these abnormalities to persist. To assess the importance of these abnormalities, percutaneous liver biopsy was carried out on eight symptom-free patients under factor-VIII cover. A wide spectrum of chronic liver disease was demonstrated, including chronic aggressive hepatitis and cirrhosis. The liver pathology bore no relation to clinical history or to biochemical findings. Hepatitis-B-virus markers were common, but evidence suggests that this is not the only factor contributing to the development of liver disease. The high incidence of chronic liver disease seems to be a recent development and is probably related to factor-concentrate replacement therapy.