Differential Diagnosis: Hepatic Complications in Inborn Errors of Immunity

J Clin Med. 2023 Dec 3;12(23):7480. doi: 10.3390/jcm12237480.

Abstract

Inborn errors of immunity (IEIs) are a heterogeneous group of diverse clinical and genetic phenotypes that have an estimated combined prevalence as high as 1/1000. Increased risk of frequent, severe, or opportunistic infections is a common feature of IEIs, but there are also diverse immune-mediated, non-infective complications that are associated with significant morbidity and mortality. As patient survival increases, these are becoming more apparent within the liver. Hepatic involvement of IEIs may not only manifest as infections, but also nodular regenerative hyperplasia, granulomatous disease, autoimmune hepatitis and malignancy. As therapeutic options for patients are expanding, with both pharmaceutical treatments as well as haematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT), iatrogenic liver injury is increasingly common and important to identify. This review article summarises the spectrum of hepatic complications seen in IEIs, and highlights the challenges of management within this patient cohort, where immunosuppression is poorly tolerated. Early recognition and prompt diagnosis of potential hepatic complications is therefore crucial in ensuring potentially reversible causes are treated, but significant uncertainty remains regarding best practice for many features of immune dysregulation with limited high-quality evidence.

Keywords: CVID; DILI; autoimmune hepatitis; granulomas; hepatic infections; inborn errors of immunity; nodular regenerative hyperplasia; primary immunodeficiency.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.