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Vol. 28. Issue S1.
Abstracts of the 2022 Annual Meeting of the ALEH
(March 2023)
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Vol. 28. Issue S1.
Abstracts of the 2022 Annual Meeting of the ALEH
(March 2023)
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O-4 CLINICAL, HISTOLOGICAL AND SEROLOGICAL FEATURES OF AUTOIMMUNE-LIKE ACUTE LIVER INJURY AFTER SARS-COV-2 VACCINATION
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Marlene Padilla Lopez1,4, Natalia Sobenko1,4, Lucrecia Garcia Olivera2, Agustina Martinez Garmendia4, Eduardo Mullen3, Paola Casciato1,4, Sebastian Marciano4, Alejandra Villamil1,4
1 Hepatic Autoimmunity Unit, Buenos Aires Italian Hospital, Buenos Aires, Argentina
2 La Pequeña Familia Junín Clinic, Province of Buenos Aires, Argentina
3 Department of Anatomic Pathology, Buenos Aires Italian Hospital, Buenos Aires, Argentina
4 Section of Hepatology, Buenos Aires Italian Hospital, Buenos Aires, Argentina
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Vol. 28. Issue S1

Abstracts of the 2022 Annual Meeting of the ALEH

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Introduction and Objectives

Acute autoimmune-like liver injury has been increasingly reported after vaccination against SARS-CoV-2. Pathogenesis, steroid requirement and long-term prognosis are unknown. This study aimed to evaluate clinical, serological and histological features, response to treatment and prognosis in patients with post-vaccination acute hepatitis.

Materials and Methods

We included patients without known pre-existing liver diseases with transaminase levels ≥ 2.5 upper limits of normal within 90 days after the SARS-CoV-2 vaccine with an available liver biopsy. Clinical data and outcomes after a six months follow-up were collected.

Results

17 patients were included,12 females, median age 60 (51,5/66) exposed to vectorial (Sputnik V n=7, AstraZeneca n=6), inactivated (Sinopharm n=3) or ARNm Vaccines (Moderna=1). In 8 patients, liver injury developed after the first dose and in 7 after the second dose and in 2 after the third dose. The median time to the development of injury was 33(23,50/53,50) days. Eight patients had a history of extrahepatic autoimmune disease and five patients had metabolic syndrome and used statins. Immune serology showed anti-antinuclear antibody in 10 (58,8%), anti-smooth muscle antibody in 5(29,4%). 14/17 patients presented with elevated IgG levels. Liver histology showed lobular hepatitis in 13/17, portal hepatitis in 17/17 with plasmocytic lymphocytic infiltrate and 4/17 had eosinophils, 6/17 with severe interface hepatitis, and one patient had fibrosis Ishak stage ≥3. 12/17 (70,5%) were treated with steroids. Transaminases improved in 17 cases and normalized in 6/12 by month 6. Only 1/17 developed liver function deterioration, yet no patient required liver transplantation. Most patients tolerated the tapering of steroids and in 6 azathioprine was started before month 3.

Conclusions

Long-term follow-up might help to differentiate between induced classical autoimmune hepatitis, autoinflammatory self-limited events, or drug-induced liver injury in these patients.

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