Alcoholic Hepatitis

Alcoholic Hepatitis 


Definition

Alcohol-associated hepatitis (AAH), formerly called alcoholic hepatitis, is an acute inflammatory liver injury occurring in patients with prolonged heavy alcohol consumption .It represents the most severe manifestation of alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) and carries a high short-term mortality.


Spectrum of Alcohol-Associated Liver Disease

Stage

Reversibility

Clinical Significance

Hepatic steatosis

Completely reversible

Earliest stage,Usually asymptomatic,hepatomegaly

Alcohol-associated steatohepatitis

Potentially reversible

Jaundice, fever, anorexia, tender hepatomegaly, weight loss

Fibrosis

Partially reversible

Progressive scarring

Cirrhosis

Usually irreversible

Portal hypertension and liver failure

Decompensated cirrhosis

Irreversible

Ascites, variceal bleeding, encephalopathy

Hepatocellular carcinoma

Malignancy

Can occur with or without cirrhosis

Alcoholic steatohepatitis (ASH) and alcoholic hepatitis (AH) are not same . About 20% to 40% of those who drink alcohol in heavy amounts and have fatty liver eventually develop liver inflammation, which is known as ASH. ASH is a diagnosis based on liver histology, while AH is a clinical diagnosis. 

Epidemiology

  • Occurs in 10–35% of heavy drinkers
  • Usually(not always take that much time) develops after:
    • 5 years heavy alcohol use,Often >10 years
    • but it can occur after shorter periods of intense exposure (e.g., >6 months). Patients may stop drinking days or weeks prior to admission, because they feel too ill to drink.
  • Average alcohol intake
    • Men: >60–80 g/day
    • Women: >40–60 g/day
  • Peak age-40–60 years
  • Male predominance
  • Women develop disease with lower alcohol exposure because of lower gastric alcohol dehydrogenase activity.

Risk Factors

Alcohol-Related Factors

Patient-Related Factors

Genetic Factors

Daily heavy alcohol consumption

Female sex

PNPLA3 (I148M) mutation

Continuous alcohol consumption

Malnutrition

TM6SF2 (E167K) mutation

Binge drinking superimposed on chronic alcohol use

Obesity

MBOAT7 polymorphism

Drinking despite established cirrhosis

Smoking


Early age of alcohol initiation

Diabetes mellitus


Large lifetime cumulative alcohol intake

Genetic susceptibility / Family history


Pathogenesis

Alcoholic hepatitis results from multiple simultaneous mechanisms.

Pathogenic Mechanism

Key Events / Effects

Ethanol metabolism

Alcohol ADH Acetaldehyde ALDH Acetate; acetaldehyde causes hepatocyte injury via protein adducts and oxidative damage.

Oxidative stress

Alcohol induces CYP2E1, generating ROS lipid peroxidation, mitochondrial dysfunction, and hepatocyte apoptosis.

Gut dysbiosis

Increased intestinal permeability allows LPS endotoxin translocation, activating Kupffer cells.

Cytokine storm

Kupffer cells release TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, MCP-1 neutrophilic inflammation, hepatocyte necrosis, cholestasis, and fibrosis.

Neutrophil recruitment

Massive neutrophilic infiltration; release of elastase, myeloperoxidase, and ROS amplifies liver injury.

Adaptive immunity

Alcohol-induced neoantigens activate T cells, causing immune-mediated hepatocyte injury.

Impaired liver regeneration

Suppression of hepatic progenitor cells and hepatocyte proliferation leads to poor liver repair despite alcohol cessation.

Histopathology of ASH

Histopathological Feature

Description

Ballooning degeneration

Large swollen hepatocytes

Mallory-Denk bodies

Aggregates of damaged cytokeratin filaments

Neutrophilic infiltration

Around ballooned hepatocytes; highly characteristic

Steatosis

Usually macrovesicular

Pericellular fibrosis

“Chicken-wire fibrosis”

Cholestasis

Common in severe disease

Megamitochondria

Seen in some patients

Clinical Presentation

Usually develops over—Days,Weeks

Symptoms

  • Progressive jaundice
  • Fever
  • Malaise—Fatigue
  • Weight loss—Anorexia
  • Nausea—Vomiting
  • Right upper quadrant pain

Physical Findings

  • Tender hepatomegaly
  • Jaundice—Ascites
  • Spider angioma—Palmar erythema(alcoholic cirrhosis)
  • Muscle wasting
  • Hepatic encephalopathy(ACLF)
  • Peripheral edema
  • Fever—Tachycardia
  • Alcoholic hepatitis and alcoholic cirrhosis overlap to a large extent (and may coexist). Management is generally similar, but alcoholic hepatitis is potentially an indication for steroids.
  • Alcoholic hepatitis may manifest with multi-organ dysfunction due to ACLF. 

Investigations

Laboratory Parameter

Typical Findings

Liver enzymes

AST ↑↑↑, ALT (the rise is usually less than AST because alcohol causes pyridoxal-5′-phosphate (vitamin B6) deficiency, reducing ALT activity.), AST/ALT ratio >2, AST rarely >500 IU/L, ALT rarely >300 IU/L; transaminases >500 IU/L suggest another diagnosis (e.g., ischemic or viral hepatitis).

Bilirubin

Usually >3 mg/dL; often 10–30 mg/dL

INR

Prolonged-Reduced hepatic synthesis of clotting factors (II, V, VII, IX, X)  and impaired vitamin K utilization in  cholestasis.

Albumin

Low

CBC

Leukocytosis, neutrophilia, macrocytosis (MCV ), thrombocytopenia

Hemoglobin

Gastrointestinal bleeding, folate deficiency, bone marrow suppression, nutritional deficiency, or hypersplenism.

Leukocytosis

Common in alcohol-associated hepatitis due to systemic inflammatory response and neutrophilic inflammation; infection should also be excluded.

Leukopenia



Bone marrow suppression, hypersplenism, or advanced cirrhosis.

Macrocytosis (MCV >100 fL)

Direct toxic effect of alcohol on bone marrow, folate deficiency, and altered erythrocyte membrane lipids. May occur even without anemia.

Platelet count

Portal hypertension causes splenic sequestration (hypersplenism); alcohol can also directly suppress bone marrow.

Hyponatremia

Dilutional hyponatremia due to portal hypertension, non-osmotic vasopressin release, and water retention in decompensated cirrhosis.

Hypoglycemia

Impaired hepatic glycogen stores and reduced gluconeogenesis in advanced liver failure; alcohol also inhibits gluconeogenesis.

Other

GGT elevated, ALP mildly elevated, creatinine may rise due to acute kidney injury or hepatorenal syndrome,Carbohydrate-deficient transferrin is the most reliable marker of chronic alcoholism.

Abdominal imaging

exclude biliary obstruction and liver diseases such as hepatocellular carcinoma and liver abscess.Ultrasound is the first imaging test of choice

1. Abdominal Ultrasound (First-Line Investigation)

Typical Findings

Fatty Liver

  • Increased hepatic echogenicity (“bright liver”)
  • Hepatomegaly

Cirrhosis

  • Nodular liver surface
  • Coarse heterogeneous echotexture
  • Irregular liver margins

Portal Hypertension

  • Splenomegaly
  • Ascites
  • Dilated portal vein
  • Recanalized paraumbilical vein
  • Portosystemic collateral vessels

2. Doppler Ultrasound

Findings

  • Portal vein diameter >13 mm
  • Reduced portal vein flow velocity
  • Hepatofugal (reversed) portal flow in advanced disease
  • Portal vein thrombosis
  • Hepatic vein abnormalities

3. Transient Elastography (FibroScan)

Limitations

Liver stiffness may be overestimated in:

  • Acute alcohol-associated hepatitis
  • Acute hepatic inflammation
  • Cholestasis
  • Hepatic congestion

Therefore, defer FibroScan until acute inflammation has resolved when possible.

Imaging for Hepatocellular Carcinoma Surveillance

Patients with cirrhosis due to ALD should undergo surveillance for HCC.

Recommended modality:

  • Abdominal ultrasound every 6 months, with or without serum alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), depending on local practice and guideline recommendations.

Diagnostic Criteria (NIAAA Consensus)

Diagnosis is primarily clinical with supporting laboratory findings .

  • Jaundice within the previous 8 weeks
  • Long-termfor ≥6 months-heavy alcohol use:
    • 40 g/day (women)
    • 60 g/day (men)
  • Alcohol use within the preceding 60 days
  • AST >50 IU/L
  • AST/ALT ratio >1.5(<1.5-think of alternate diagnosis)
  • AST and ALT both <400 IU/L
  • Total bilirubin >3 mg/dL
  • Exclusion of alternative diagnoses (e.g., drug-induced liver injury, ischemic hepatitis).

When is Liver Biopsy Needed?

Routine biopsy is not recommended.

Consider transjugular liver biopsy if:

  • Diagnosis is uncertain
  • Competing diagnoses exist
  • Corticosteroid therapy is being considered but diagnosis is unclear
  • Drug-induced liver injury, autoimmune hepatitis, or malignancy is suspected

Differential Diagnosis

Disease

Distinguishing Features

Acute viral hepatitis

AST/ALT often >1000 IU/L, viral serology positive

Drug-induced liver injury

Medication history, variable enzyme pattern

Ischemic hepatitis

Shock, AST/ALT often >1000 IU/L

Autoimmune hepatitis

ANA, ASMA, IgG elevated

Acute biliary obstruction

Marked ALP elevation, biliary dilatation on imaging

Acute-on-chronic liver failure

Identifiable precipitant with underlying cirrhosis

Wilson disease

Young age, low ceruloplasmin, hemolysis

Severity Assessment

Scoring System

Key Features / Interpretation

Maddrey Discriminant Function (MDF)

Formula: 4.6 × (PT<sub>patient</sub> − PT<sub>control</sub>) + Bilirubin (mg/dL). <32: Mild disease; ≥32: Severe alcoholic hepatitis with high short-term mortality; consider corticosteroids if no contraindications.

MELD Score

Preferred by recent guidelines; higher score indicates greater mortality risk. MELD ≥21 generally indicates severe disease.

MELD-Na

Incorporates serum sodium; often predicts mortality better than MELD alone.

ABIC Score

Uses Age, Bilirubin, INR, Creatinine; stratifies patients into low-, intermediate-, and high-riskmortality groups.

Glasgow Alcoholic Hepatitis Score (GAHS)

Uses Age, WBC, Urea, INR, Bilirubin; GAHS ≥9 indicates poor prognosis and may support corticosteroid therapy.

Lille Score

Calculated after 7 days (or day 4 in some centers) of corticosteroid therapy using Age, Albumin, Bilirubin (Day 0 & 7), Creatinine, INR. <0.45: Responder Continue corticosteroids; ≥0.45:Non-responder Stop corticosteroids.

Management

1. Complete Alcohol Abstinence

The single most important intervention.

Measures include:

  • Addiction counseling
  • Patients with AH are at risk of alcohol withdrawal. Lorazepam and oxazepam are the preferred benzodiazepines for prophylaxis and treatment of alcohol withdrawal.

2. Nutritional Therapy

Malnutrition is common.

Recommendations:

  • 35–40 kcal/kg/day(nutritional supplementation preferably via mouth or NG tube should be considered if oral intake is less than 1200 kcal in a day.)
  • 1.2–1.5 g protein/kg/day
  • Frequent meals
  • Late-evening snack
  • Enteral feeding if oral intake is inadequate
  • Vitamin supplementation:Thiamine—Folate—Pyridoxine—Vitamin D—Zinc—Magnesium (if deficient)

Protein restriction is not recommended unless temporarily required for severe uncontrolled encephalopathy.


When to give vitamin K

Vitamin K (usually 10 mg IV or slow IV/SC, depending on the clinical situation) is appropriate when there is suspected or confirmed vitamin K deficiency, such as:

  • Malnutrition (common in chronic alcohol use)
  • Prolonged poor oral intake
  • Cholestatic liver disease with fat-soluble vitamin malabsorption
  • Recent prolonged broad-spectrum antibiotic use
  • Before concluding that coagulopathy is solely due to liver failure

A common clinical approach is to administer 10 mg vitamin K daily for up to 3 days in patients with cirrhosis or alcohol-associated hepatitis when deficiency is suspected.


3. Infection Screening

Approximately one-quarter of patients have infection at presentation.

Perform:

  • Blood cultures
  • Urine culture
  • Chest radiograph
  • Diagnostic paracentesis if ascites is present
  • Appropriate cultures based on symptoms

Treat infections promptly; active uncontrolled infection is a contraindication to corticosteroids.


4. Corticosteroids(controversial)

Indications:

  • Severe alcoholic hepatitis (e.g., MDF ≥32 or MELD ≥21-American Gastroenterology Society guidelines )
  • No contraindications

Preferred regimen:Prednisolone 40 mg orally once daily for 28 days

If oral therapy is not feasible:Intravenous methylprednisolone 32 mg/day (equivalent glucocorticoid dose)

Assess response using the Lille score after 7 days (or day 4 in selected centers).

Contraindications include:

  • Active uncontrolled infection
  • Gastrointestinal bleeding
  • Acute kidney injury requiring caution
  • Severe pancreatitis
  • Uncontrolled diabetes or psychosis
  • Uncontrolled sepsis

5. N-Acetylcysteine (NAC)

Intravenous NAC for 5 days, combined with prednisolone( American Gastroenterology Guidelines recommend for patients with a MELD score >20 ), may improve short-term outcomes in selected patients with severe alcoholic hepatitis, but it is not recommended as monotherapy.


6. Pentoxifylline(controversial)

  • No longer recommended because randomized trials have not demonstrated a survival benefit.
  • 400 mg orally, three times a day for 28 days
  • Many recent trials, including the STOPAH trial and meta-analysis of the use of steroids and Pentoxifylline, reveal only short-term (28-day) mortality improvements with not much difference of 6-month, or 1-year mortality.

7. Management of Complications

Treat according to standard cirrhosis and liver failure guidelines:

  • Ascites: sodium restriction, diuretics, large-volume paracentesis with albumin when indicated
  • Hepatic encephalopathy: lactulose ± rifaximin
  • Variceal bleeding: vasoactive drugs, endoscopic therapy, antibiotics
  • Hepatorenal syndrome: albumin plus vasoconstrictors (e.g., terlipressin where appropriate)
  • Acute kidney injury: optimize volume status, avoid nephrotoxins, renal replacement therapy if indicated
  • Coagulopathy: blood products only for bleeding or invasive procedures

8. Liver Transplantation

Consider in carefully selected patients with:

  • Severe alcoholic hepatitis not responding to medical therapy (e.g., high Lille score)
  • High predicted mortality
  • Favorable psychosocial evaluation and low relapse risk

Many centers no longer require a fixed 6-month abstinence period, instead using individualized multidisciplinary assessment.


Prognosis

Approximate mortality:

Severity

Mortality

Mild disease

<10% at 28 days

Severe disease

20–40% at 28 days

Steroid non-responders (high Lille score)

Up to 70% at 6 months

Causes of Death

  • Acute liver failure
  • Sepsis
  • Hepatorenal syndrome
  • Variceal bleeding
  • Multiorgan failure

References

  1. Crabb DW, Im GY, Szabo G, Mellinger JL, Lucey MR. Diagnosis and treatment of alcohol-associated liver diseases: 2024 Practice Guidance from the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. Hepatology. 2024.
  2. European Association for the Study of the Liver. EASL Clinical Practice Guidelines on the management of alcohol-related liver disease. J Hepatol. 2024.
  3. Singal AK, Mathurin P. Diagnosis and treatment of alcohol-associated hepatitis. N Engl J Med. 2021;385:815-26.
  4. O’Shea RS, Dasarathy S, McCullough AJ. Alcoholic liver disease. Am J Gastroenterol. 2010;105:14-32. (Foundational ACG guideline; superseded in parts by newer guidance)
  5. Jameson JL, Fauci AS, Kasper DL, et al., editors. Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine. 22nd ed. New York: McGraw-Hill; 2024.

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