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Small Duct Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis: An Underdiagnosed Cause of Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis.

Curēus 2020 March 18
Classic or large duct primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) is part of the PSC spectrum. It is diagnosed on clinical and biochemical findings of cholestasis supported by biliary tree changes on cholangiography, forgoing the need for an invasive liver biopsy. The spectrum contains various PSC variants with distinct clinical courses and outcomes. We present a case of small duct PSC, a rare variant that manifested insidiously with clinical and objective cholestasis but appeared negative on diagnostic cholangiography. Eventually, a liver biopsy was obtained that revealed chronic bilious disease of the small and microscopic ducts with simultaneous changes consistent with liver cirrhosis. Despite presenting like its classical counterpart, small duct PSC can remain undetectable on cholangiography due to the diminutive size of the bile ducts requiring histological confirmation. In contrast to classic PSC, small duct PSC portends a much better prognosis. However, it eventually progresses to the classic form or end-stage liver disease, requiring patients to receive timely surveillance and transplantation referrals. Due to the limited understanding of this disease process, patients with similar presentations often pose a diagnostic dilemma due to the clinical and cholangiographic mismatch. This case aims to reaffirm that a negative cholangiography does not rule out the PSC spectrum and that small duct disease is a rare but growing entity. The paucity in cases emphasizes the importance of isolated reports in guiding workup and management, especially since surveillance schedules and transplantation guidelines have not been formally established.

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