Persistent Cholestatic Injury and Secondary Sclerosing Cholangitis in COVID-19 Patients
Angela Shih, Dilara Hatipoğlu, Robert M. Wilechansky, Reece Goiffon, Vikram Deshpande, Joseph Misdraji, Raymond T. Chung
Abstract
CONTEXT.—: COVID-19 has been associated with liver injury, and a small subset of patients recovering from severe disease have shown persistent markedly elevated liver biochemistries for months after infection. OBJECTIVE.—: To characterize persistent biliary injury after COVID-19. DESIGN.—: A search of the pathology archives identified 7 post-COVID-19 patients with persistent biliary injury, and the clinical, radiologic, and pathologic features were assessed. RESULTS.—: All patients in this cohort presented with respiratory symptoms and had a complicated clinical course with acute elevation of liver biochemistries. Alkaline phosphatase (ALP) was markedly and persistently elevated after discharge (median peak ALP, 1498 IU/L, at a median of 84 days from diagnosis). Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography showed 3 patients with irregularity, stricturing, and dilatation of intrahepatic ducts; no radiographic abnormalities were identified in the remaining 4 patients. Liver biopsies showed mild portal changes with features of cholestatic injury in 4 patients (bile duct injury and canalicular cholestasis) and marked biliary obstruction in 2 patients (profound cholestasis, ductular reaction, and bile infarcts), but no SARS-CoV-2 RNA was identified on in situ hybridization. On follow-up, most patients had minimal intervention and showed marked improvement of liver biochemistries but with mild persistent elevation of ALP. CONCLUSIONS.—: A subset of critically ill COVID-19 patients demonstrates marked and persistent cholestatic injury, with radiographic and histologic evidence of secondary sclerosing cholangitis, suggesting that cholestatic liver disease and secondary sclerosing cholangitis may be long-term sequelae of COVID-19 acute illness as a longstanding manifestation of critical illness.