Abstracts of the 2021 Annual meeting of the ALEH (Asociación Latinoamericana para el Estudio del Hígado)
More infoAzathioprine (AZA) and prednisone (PD) are the standard treatment (ST) for the onset or relapse of autoimmune hepatitis (AIH). Antimalarials were effective for maintenance of remission of AIH after immunosuppression withdrawal. Our aim is to describe a series of patients who relapsed after antimalarial withdrawal and achieved biochemical remission after reintroduction of chloroquine in monotherapy.
MethodsEight patients received chloroquine diphosphate (DCQ) 250mg/d or hydroxichloroquine (HCQ) 400-800mg/d in monotherapy for biochemical remission after relapse. The schedule is described below: histological remission (HR) with ST → ST withdrawal and antimalarial use for maintenance of remission for 1-3y → antimalarial withdrawal → relapse of AIH → reintroduction of antimalarial instead of ST, at the request of patient due to corticosteroids side effects (SE). Four out of 8 patients underwent liver biopsy to evaluate HR after at least 18mo of biochemical remission.
ResultsMean age at diagnosis of AIH of 36.2 ± 20.4y; 6 type-1, 2 anti-SLA/LP (5 reactive in 7 tested); 3 with cirrhosis at diagnosis. Mean doses of AZA/PD at HR were, respectively, 84.4 ± 18.6 and 9.4 ± 2.2mg/d. Mean interval between antimalarial withdrawal and relapse was 20.5 ± 34.1mo. Mean ALT at relapse was 139.7 ± 54.2 U/L. Three patients received DCQ and 5 HCQ. During HCQ intake 1 patient needed further adjustment of drug to 800 mg/d for 15 days due to worsening of ALT from 130 to 246 U/L, with subsequent reduction to the initial dose. Seven patients achieved biochemical remission, in a mean time of 14.2 ± 19.9mo; 3/4 had histological remission. The drug was well tolerated and there were no serious SE.
ConclusionsCQ monotherapy was safe and effective for induction of remission in this subgroup of AIH. This finding raises arguments to include this drug as an option for treatment of AIH, not necessarily in monotherapy.