Usefulness of Steroid Administration for Diagnosis of IgG4-Related Sclerosing Cholangitis
Author(s) -
Norio Kubo,
Hideki Suzuki,
Tsutomu Kobayashi,
Kenichiro Araki,
Shigeru Sasaki,
Wataru Wada,
Hiroyuki Kuwano
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
international surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.132
H-Index - 39
eISSN - 2520-2456
pISSN - 0020-8868
DOI - 10.9738/cc78.1
Subject(s) - medicine , malignancy , bile duct , radiology , stenosis , percutaneous , embolization , hepatectomy , primary sclerosing cholangitis , surgery , gastroenterology , resection , disease
Immunoglobulin G4-related sclerosing cholangitis (IgG4-SC) is one of the IgG4-related systemic sclerosing diseases and responds well to steroid therapy. A 58-year-old male was admitted with hilar bile duct stenosis revealed by computed tomography. We performed percutaneous transhepatic right portal vein embolization (PTPE) and scheduled a right hepatectomy because a hilar cholangiocarcinoma was first suspected. However, there was no cytologic evidence of malignancy and serum IgG4 was elevated. Steroid therapy was initiated after PTPE. There was no evidence of bile duct stenosis after 4 weeks. Improving diagnostic technique, IgG4-SC was diagnosed and treated with steroid therapy. In some cases, we couldn't deny the malignancy and performed unnecessary resection. We recommend that steroid administration while waiting for the liver volume to increase after PTPE is useful. The therapy aids in the diagnosis of bile duct stenosis, which has value for a hilar bile duct limit type of IgG4-SC, as in the case reported here.
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