6 research outputs found
Vascular adhesion protein-1 is elevated in primary sclerosing cholangitis, is predictive of clinical outcome and facilitates recruitment of gut-tropic lymphocytes to liver in a substrate-dependent manner
OBJECTIVE: Primary
sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) is the classical hepatobiliary
manifestation of IBD. This clinical association is linked pathologically
to the recruitment of mucosal T cells to the liver, via vascular
adhesion protein (VAP)-1-dependent enzyme activity. Our aim was to
examine the expression, function and enzymatic activation of the
ectoenzyme VAP-1 in patients with PSC.DESIGN: We
examined VAP-1 expression in patients with PSC, correlated levels with
clinical characteristics and determined the functional consequences of
enzyme activation by specific enzyme substrates on hepatic endothelium.RESULTS: The
intrahepatic enzyme activity of VAP-1 was elevated in PSC versus
immune-mediated disease controls and non-diseased liver (p<0.001).
The adhesion of gut-tropic α4β7+lymphocytes to hepatic
endothelial cells in vitro under flow was attenuated by 50% following
administration of the VAP-1 inhibitor semicarbazide (p<0.01). Of a
number of natural VAP-1 substrates tested, cysteamine-which can be
secreted by inflamed colonic epithelium and gut bacteria-was the most
efficient (yielded the highest enzymatic rate) and efficacious in its
ability to induce expression of functional mucosal addressin cell
adhesion molecule-1 on hepatic endothelium. In a prospectively evaluated
patient cohort with PSC, elevated serum soluble (s)VAP-1 levels
predicted poorer transplant-free survival for patients, independently
(HR: 3.85, p=0.003) and additively (HR: 2.02, p=0.012) of the presence
of liver cirrhosis.CONCLUSIONS: VAP-1
expression is increased in PSC, facilitates adhesion of gut-tropic
lymphocytes to liver endothelium in a substrate-dependent manner, and
elevated levels of its circulating form predict clinical outcome in
patients.</p
Factors Associated With Outcomes of Patients With Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis and Development and Validation of a Risk Scoring System
We sought to identify factors that are predictive of liver transplantation or death in patients with primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC), and to develop and validate a contemporaneous risk score for use in a real-world clinical setting. Analyzing data from 1,001 patients recruited to the UK-PSC research cohort, we evaluated clinical variables for their association with 2-year and 10-year outcome through Cox-proportional hazards and C-statistic analyses. We generated risk scores for short-term and long-term outcome prediction, validating their use in two independent cohorts totaling 451 patients. Thirty-six percent of the derivation cohort were transplanted or died over a cumulative follow-up of 7,904 years. Serum alkaline phosphatase of at least 2.4 × upper limit of normal at 1 year after diagnosis was predictive of 10-year outcome (hazard ratio [HR] = 3.05; C = 0.63; median transplant-free survival 63 versus 108 months; P < 0.0001), as was the presence of extrahepatic biliary disease (HR = 1.45; P = 0.01). We developed two risk scoring systems based on age, values of bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, albumin, platelets, presence of extrahepatic biliary disease, and variceal hemorrhage, which predicted 2-year and 10-year outcomes with good discrimination (C statistic = 0.81 and 0.80, respectively). Both UK-PSC risk scores were well-validated in our external cohort and outperformed the Mayo Clinic and aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio index (APRI) scores (C statistic = 0.75 and 0.63, respectively). Although heterozygosity for the previously validated human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DR*03:01 risk allele predicted increased risk of adverse outcome (HR = 1.33; P = 0.001), its addition did not improve the predictive accuracy of the UK-PSC risk scores. Conclusion: Our analyses, based on a detailed clinical evaluation of a large representative cohort of participants with PSC, furthers our understanding of clinical risk markers and reports the development and validation of a real-world scoring system to identify those patients most likely to die or require liver transplantation