Diagnosis and Management of Patients With Alpha(1)-Antitrypsin (A1At) Deficiency Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Alpha(1)-antitrypsin (A1AT) deficiency is an autosomal codominant disease that can cause chronic liver disease, cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma in children and adults and increases risk for emphysema in adults. The development of symptomatic disease varies; some patients have life-threatening symptoms in childhood, whereas others remain asymptomatic and healthy into old age. As a result of this variability, patients present across multiple disciplines, including pediatrics, adult medicine, hepatology, genetics, and pulmonology. This can give physicians the mistaken impression that the condition is less common than it actually is and can lead to fragmented care that omits critical interventions commonly performed by other specialists. We sought to present a rational approach for hepatologists to manage adult patients with A1AT deficiency.

publication date

  • 2012-06-01

NIH Manuscript Submission System ID

  • NIHMS360257

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC3360829

Web of Science ID

  • 000304517400007

grantCited

  • K24 CA139570
  • P50 AA011999-13
  • R01 DK072237-06
  • R01 DK090962-01
  • R01 GM041804-24
  • R24 DK090962-01
  • UL1 TR000064

PubMed ID

  • 22200689

start page

  • 575

end page

  • 580

volume

  • 10