FAILURE OF CUSTOMARY TREATMENT IN CHRONIC ACTIVE LIVER-DISEASE - CAUSES AND MANAGEMENT
- 1 January 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 8 (3), 221-227
Abstract
Among 134 patients with chronic active liver disease, selected by identical clinical, biochemical and morphologic criteria, assigned to standard treatment programs and followed at regular intervals, 21 of 105 failed treatment with standard regimens containing steroids. Treatment failure was more common in patients whose serum contained hepatitis B surface antigen, those with more severe liver disease as judged by liver function tests (prothrombin time) and hepatic morphology (subacute hepatitis or cirrhosis). Early diagnosis of treatment failure, based on changes in liver function tests rather than on clinical features of deterioration, coupled with the immediate administration of higher doses of prednisone with or without higher doses of azathioprine, resulted in disappearance of clinical and biochemical features of disease activity in the majority of patients. When endogenous encephalopathy developed the outlook was grave, regardless of previous or subsequent therapy. Patients at risk for failing conventional treatment should be identified early, followed carefully with serial liver function tests, and be treated promptly with higher doses of medication when deterioration occurs.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- A Serum Antigen (Australia Antigen) in Down's Syndrome, Leukemia, and HepatitisAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1967