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Item A genetic risk score and diabetes predict development of alcohol-related cirrhosis in drinkers(Elsevier, 2022) Whitfield, John B.; Schwantes-An, Tae-Hwi; Darlay, Rebecca; Aithal, Guruprasad P.; Atkinson, Stephen R.; Bataller, Ramon; Botwin, Greg; Chalasani, Naga P.; Cordell, Heather J.; Daly, Ann K.; Day, Christopher P.; Eyer, Florian; Foroud, Tatiana; Gleeson, Dermot; Goldman, David; Haber, Paul S.; Jacquet, Jean-Marc; Liang, Tiebing; Liangpunsakul, Suthat; Masson, Steven; Mathurin, Philippe; Moirand, Romain; McQuillin, Andrew; Moreno, Christophe; Morgan, Marsha Y.; Mueller, Sebastian; Müllhaupt, Beat; Nagy, Laura E.; Nahon, Pierre; Nalpas, Bertrand; Naveau, Sylvie; Perney, Pascal; Pirmohamed, Munir; Seitz, Helmut K.; Soyka, Michael; Stickel, Felix; Thompson, Andrew; Thursz, Mark R.; Trépo, Eric; Morgan, Timothy R.; Seth, Devanshi; GenomALC Consortium; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineBackground & aims: Only a minority of excess alcohol drinkers develop cirrhosis. We developed and evaluated risk stratification scores to identify those at highest risk. Methods: Three cohorts (GenomALC-1: n = 1,690, GenomALC-2: n = 3,037, UK Biobank: relevant n = 6,898) with a history of heavy alcohol consumption (≥80 g/day (men), ≥50 g/day (women), for ≥10 years) were included. Cases were participants with alcohol-related cirrhosis. Controls had a history of similar alcohol consumption but no evidence of liver disease. Risk scores were computed from up to 8 genetic loci identified previously as associated with alcohol-related cirrhosis and 3 clinical risk factors. Score performance for the stratification of alcohol-related cirrhosis risk was assessed and compared across the alcohol-related liver disease spectrum, including hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Results: A combination of 3 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) (PNPLA3:rs738409, SUGP1-TM6SF2:rs10401969, HSD17B13:rs6834314) and diabetes status best discriminated cirrhosis risk. The odds ratios (ORs) and (95% CIs) between the lowest (Q1) and highest (Q5) score quintiles of the 3-SNP score, based on independent allelic effect size estimates, were 5.99 (4.18-8.60) (GenomALC-1), 2.81 (2.03-3.89) (GenomALC-2), and 3.10 (2.32-4.14) (UK Biobank). Patients with diabetes and high risk scores had ORs of 14.7 (7.69-28.1) (GenomALC-1) and 17.1 (11.3-25.7) (UK Biobank) compared to those without diabetes and with low risk scores. Patients with cirrhosis and HCC had significantly higher mean risk scores than patients with cirrhosis alone (0.76 ± 0.06 vs. 0.61 ± 0.02, p = 0.007). Score performance was not significantly enhanced by information on additional genetic risk variants, body mass index or coffee consumption. Conclusions: A risk score based on 3 genetic risk variants and diabetes status enables the stratification of heavy drinkers based on their risk of cirrhosis, allowing for the provision of earlier preventative interventions. Lay summary: Excessive chronic drinking leads to cirrhosis in some people, but so far there is no way to identify those at high risk of developing this debilitating disease. We developed a genetic risk score that can identify patients at high risk. The risk of cirrhosis is increased >10-fold with just two risk factors - diabetes and a high genetic risk score. Risk assessment using this test could enable the early and personalised management of this disease in high-risk patients.Item A polygenic risk score for alcohol-associated cirrhosis among heavy drinkers with European ancestry(Wolters Kluwer, 2024-05-10) Schwantes-An, Tae-Hwi; Whitfield, John B.; Aithal, Guruprasad P.; Atkinson, Stephen R.; Bataller, Ramon; Botwin, Greg; Chalasani, Naga P.; Cordell, Heather J.; Daly, Ann K.; Darlay, Rebecca; Day, Christopher P.; Eyer, Florian; Foroud, Tatiana; Gawrieh, Samer; Gleeson, Dermot; Goldman, David; Haber, Paul S.; Jacquet, Jean-Marc; Lammert, Craig S.; Liang, Tiebing; Liangpunsakul, Suthat; Masson, Steven; Mathurin, Philippe; Moirand, Romain; McQuillin, Andrew; Moreno, Christophe; Morgan, Marsha Y.; Mueller, Sebastian; Müllhaupt, Beat; Nagy, Laura E.; Nahon, Pierre; Nalpas, Bertrand; Naveau, Sylvie; Perney, Pascal; Pirmohamed, Munir; Seitz, Helmut K.; Soyka, Michael; Stickel, Felix; Thompson, Andrew; Thursz, Mark R.; Trépo, Eric; Morgan, Timothy R.; Seth, Devanshi; GenomALC Consortium; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineBackground: Polygenic Risk Scores (PRS) based on results from genome-wide association studies offer the prospect of risk stratification for many common and complex diseases. We developed a PRS for alcohol-associated cirrhosis by comparing single-nucleotide polymorphisms among patients with alcohol-associated cirrhosis (ALC) versus drinkers who did not have evidence of liver fibrosis/cirrhosis. Methods: Using a data-driven approach, a PRS for ALC was generated using a meta-genome-wide association study of ALC (N=4305) and an independent cohort of heavy drinkers with ALC and without significant liver disease (N=3037). It was validated in 2 additional independent cohorts from the UK Biobank with diagnosed ALC (N=467) and high-risk drinking controls (N=8981) and participants in the Indiana Biobank Liver cohort with alcohol-associated liver disease (N=121) and controls without liver disease (N=3239). Results: A 20-single-nucleotide polymorphisms PRS for ALC (PRSALC) was generated that stratified risk for ALC comparing the top and bottom deciles of PRS in the 2 validation cohorts (ORs: 2.83 [95% CI: 1.82 -4.39] in UK Biobank; 4.40 [1.56 -12.44] in Indiana Biobank Liver cohort). Furthermore, PRSALC improved the prediction of ALC risk when added to the models of clinically known predictors of ALC risk. It also stratified the risk for metabolic dysfunction -associated steatotic liver disease -cirrhosis (3.94 [2.23 -6.95]) in the Indiana Biobank Liver cohort -based exploratory analysis. Conclusions: PRSALC incorporates 20 single-nucleotide polymorphisms, predicts increased risk for ALC, and improves risk stratification for ALC compared with the models that only include clinical risk factors. This new score has the potential for early detection of heavy drinking patients who are at high risk for ALC.Item Activin B Promotes Hepatic Fibrogenesis(2019-08) Wang, Yan; Dai, Guoli; Berbari, Nicolas; Yaden, Benjamin; Liangpunsakul, Suthat; Skalnik, David G.Liver fibrosis is a common consequence of various chronic liver diseases. Although transforming growth factor β 1 (TGFβ1) expression is known to be associated with liver fibrosis, the reduced clinical efficacy of TGFβ1 inhibition or the inefficiency to completely prevent liver fibrosis in mice with liver-specific knockout of TGF receptor II suggests that other factors can mediate liver fibrogenesis. As a TGFβ superfamily ligand, activin A signaling modulates liver injury by prohibiting hepatocyte proliferation, mediating hepatocyte apoptosis, promoting Kupffer cell activation, and inducing hepatic stellate cell (HSC) activation in vitro. However, the mechanism of action and in vivo functional significance of activin A in liver fibrosis models remain uncertain. Moreover, whether activin B, another ligand structurally related to activin A, is involved in liver fibrogenesis is not yet known. This study aimed to investigate the role of activin A and B in liver fibrosis initiation and progression. The levels of hepatic and circulating activin B and A were analyzed in patients with various chronic liver diseases, including end-stage liver diseases (ESLD), non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), and alcoholic liver disease (ALD). In addition, their levels were measured in mouse carbon tetrachloride (CCl4), bile duct ligation (BDL), and ALD liver injury models. Mouse primary hepatocytes, RAW264.7 cells, and LX-2 cells were used as in vitro models of hepatocytes, macrophages, and HSCs, respectively. The specificity and potency of anti-activin B monoclonal antibody (mAb) and anti-activin A mAb were evaluated using Smad2/3 luciferase assay. Activin A, activin B, or their combination were immunologically inactivated by the neutralizing mAbs in mice with progressive or established liver fibrosis induced by CCl4 or with developing cholestatic liver fibrosis induced by BDL surgery. In patients with ESLD, NASH, and ALD, increases in hepatic and circulating activin B, but not activin A, were associated with liver fibrosis, irrespective of etiology. In mice with CCl4-, BDL-, or alcohol-induced liver injury, activin B was persistently elevated in the liver and circulation, whereas activin A showed only transient increases. Activin B was expressed and secreted mainly by the hepatocytes and other cells, including cholangiocytes, activated HSCs, and immune cells. Exogenous administration of activin B promoted hepatocyte injury, activated macrophages to release cytokines, and induced a pro-fibrotic expression profile and septa formation in HSCs. Co-treatment of activin A and B interdependently activated the chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand 1 (CXCL1)/inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) pathway in macrophages and additively upregulated connective tissue growth factor expression in HSCs. Activin B and A had redundant, unique, and interactive effects on the transcripts related to HSC activation. The neutralization of activin B attenuated the development of liver fibrosis and improved liver function in mice with CCl4- or BDL-induced liver fibrosis and largely reversed the already established liver fibrosis in the CCl4 mouse model. These effects were improved by the administration of additional anti-activin A antibody. Combination of both antibodies also inhibited hepatic and circulating inflammatory cytokine production in the BDL mouse model. In conclusion, activin B is a potential circulating biomarker and potent promotor of liver fibrosis. Its levels in the liver and circulation increase significantly in both acute and chronic states of liver injury. Activin B might additively or interdependently cooperate with activin A, which directly acts on multiple liver cell populations during liver injury and fibrosis, as the combination of both proteins increases pro-inflammatory and pro-fibrotic responses in vitro. In addition, the neutralization of both activin A and activin B in vivo enhances the preventive and reversible effects of liver injury and fibrosis compared to that when activin B alone is neutralized. Our data reveal a novel target of liver fibrosis and the mechanism of activin B-mediated initiation of this process by damaging hepatocytes and activating macrophages and HSCs. Our findings show that activin B promotes hepatic fibrogenesis, and that targeting of activin B has anti-inflammatory and anti-fibrotic effects, which ameliorate liver injury by preventing or regressing liver fibrosis. Antagonizing either activin B alone or in combination with activin A prevents and regresses liver fibrosis in multiple animal studies, paving way for future clinical studies.Item Activin B promotes the initiation and progression of liver fibrosis(Wolters Kluwer, 2022) Wang, Yan; Hamang, Matthew; Culver, Alexander; Jiang, Huaizhou; Yanum, Jennifer; Garcia, Veronica; Lee, Joonyong; White, Emily; Kusumanchi, Praveen; Chalasani, Naga; Liangpunsakul, Suthat; Yaden, Benjamin C.; Dai, Guoli; Biology, School of ScienceThe role of activin B, a transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) superfamily cytokine, in liver health and disease is largely unknown. We aimed to investigate whether activin B modulates liver fibrogenesis. Liver and serum activin B, along with its analog activin A, were analyzed in patients with liver fibrosis from different etiologies and in mouse acute and chronic liver injury models. Activin B, activin A, or both was immunologically neutralized in mice with progressive or established carbon tetrachloride (CCl4 )-induced liver fibrosis. Hepatic and circulating activin B was increased in human patients with liver fibrosis caused by several liver diseases. In mice, hepatic and circulating activin B exhibited persistent elevation following the onset of several types of liver injury, whereas activin A displayed transient increases. The results revealed a close correlation of activin B with liver injury regardless of etiology and species. Injured hepatocytes produced excessive activin B. Neutralizing activin B largely prevented, as well as improved, CCl4 -induced liver fibrosis, which was augmented by co-neutralizing activin A. Mechanistically, activin B mediated the activation of c-Jun-N-terminal kinase (JNK), the induction of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expression, and the maintenance of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 (PARP1) expression in injured livers. Moreover, activin B directly induced a profibrotic expression profile in hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) and stimulated these cells to form a septa structure. Conclusions: We demonstrate that activin B, cooperating with activin A, mediates the activation or expression of JNK, iNOS, and PARP1 and the activation of HSCs, driving the initiation and progression of liver fibrosis.Item Acute Alcoholic Hepatitis: Natural History and Predictors of Mortality Using a Multicenter Prospective Study(Elsevier, 2017-04-28) Lourens, Spencer; Sunjaya, Dharma B.; Singal, Ashwani; Liangpunsakul, Suthat; Puri, Puneet; Sanyal, Arun; Ren, Xiaowei; Gores, Gregory J.; Radaeva, Svetlana; Chalasani, Naga; Crabb, David W.; Katz, Barry; Kamath, Patrick S.; Shah, Vijay H.; Biostatistics, School of Public HealthObjective: To examine the natural history of acute alcoholic hepatitis (AH) and identify predictors of mortality for AH using data from a prospective multicenter observational study. Participants and Methods: We analyzed data from 164 patients with AH and 131 heavy-drinking controls with no liver disease. Participants underwent clinical/laboratory assessment at baseline and 6 and 12 months after enrollment. Multivariable analyses were conducted to identify variables associated with mortality and examine the association between coffee drinking and risk of AH. Results: Thirty-six patients with AH died during follow-up, with estimated 30-day, 90-day, 180-day, and 1-year survival of 0.91 (95% CI, 0.87-0.96), 0.85 (95% CI, 0.80-0.91), 0.80 (95% CI, 0.74-0.87), and 0.75 (95% CI, 0.68-0.83), respectively. In the multivariable analysis, higher serum bilirubin level (hazard ratio [HR]=1.059; 95% CI, 1.022-1.089), lower hemoglobin level (HR=1.263; 95% CI, 1.012-1.575), and lower platelet count (HR=1.006; 95% CI, 1.001-1.012) were independently associated with mortality in AH. Compared with controls, fewer patients with AH regularly consumed coffee (20% vs 44%; P<.001), and this association between regular coffee drinking and lower risk of AH persisted after controlling for relevant covariates (odds ratio=0.26; 95% CI, 0.15-0.46). Time-dependent receiver operating characteristic curve analysis revealed that Model for End-Stage Liver Disease; Maddrey Discriminant Function; age, serum bilirubin, international normalized ratio, and serum creatinine; and Child-Pugh scores all provided similar discrimination performance at 30 days (area under the curve=0.73-0.77). Conclusion: Alcoholic hepatitis remains highly fatal, with 1-year mortality of 25%. Regular coffee consumption was associated with lower risk of AH in heavy drinkers.Item Adult Diffuse Hepatic Hemangiomatosis: A Rare Cause of Dilated Cardiomyopathy and Sudden Cardiac Arrest(Springer, Part of Springer Science+Business Media, 2014-01) Supakul, Rodjawan; Vakili, Saeed T.; Liangpunsakul, Suthat; Department of Medicine, IU School of MedicineItem Advanced endoscopic ultrasound management techniques for preneoplastic pancreatic cystic lesions(BMJ, 2017-01) Arshad, Hafiz Muhammad Sharjeel; Bharmal, Sheila; Duman, Deniz Guney; Liangpunsakul, Suthat; Turner, Brian G.; Department of Medicine, IU School of MedicinePancreatic cystic lesions can be benign, premalignant or malignant. The recent increase in detection and tremendous clinical variability of pancreatic cysts has presented a significant therapeutic challenge to physicians. Mucinous cystic neoplasms are of particular interest given their known malignant potential. This review article provides a brief but comprehensive review of premalignant pancreatic cystic lesions with advanced endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) management approaches. A comprehensive literature search was performed using PubMed, Cochrane, OVID and EMBASE databases. Preneoplastic pancreatic cystic lesions include mucinous cystadenoma and intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm. The 2012 International Sendai Guidelines guide physicians in their management of pancreatic cystic lesions. Some of the advanced EUS management techniques include ethanol ablation, chemotherapeutic (paclitaxel) ablation, radiofrequency ablation and cryotherapy. In future, EUS-guided injections of drug-eluting beads and neodymium:yttrium aluminum agent laser ablation is predicted to be an integral part of EUS-guided management techniques. In summary, International Sendai Consensus Guidelines should be used to make a decision regarding management of pancreatic cystic lesions. Advanced EUS techniques are proving extremely beneficial in management, especially in those patients who are at high surgical risk.Item Aging exaggerates acute-on-chronic alcohol-induced liver injury in mice and humans by inhibiting neutrophilic sirtuin 1-C/EBPα-miRNA-223 axis(Wolters Kluwer, 2022) Ren, Ruixue; He, Yong; Ding, Dong; Cui, Aoyuan; Bao, Huarui; Ma, Jing; Hou, Xin; Li, Yu; Feng, Dechun; Li, Xiaoling; Liangpunsakul, Suthat; Gao, Bin; Wang, Hua; Medicine, School of MedicineBackground and aims: Aging exacerbates liver neutrophil infiltration and alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) in mice and humans, but the underlying mechanisms remain obscure. This study aimed to examine the effect of aging and alcohol consumption on neutrophilic Sirtuin 1 (SIRT1) and microRNA-223 (miR-223), and their contribution to ALD pathogeneses. Approach and results: Young and aged myeloid-specific Sirt1 knockout mice were subjected to chronic-plus-binge ethanol feeding. Blood samples from healthy controls and patients with chronic alcohol drinking who presented with acute intoxication were analyzed. Neutrophilic Sirt1 and miR-223 expression were down-regulated in aged mice compared with young mice. Deletion of the Sirt1 gene in myeloid cells including neutrophils exacerbated chronic-plus-binge ethanol-induced liver injury and inflammation and down-regulated neutrophilic miR-223 expression. Immunoprecipitation experiments revealed that SIRT1 promoted C/EBPα deacetylation by directly interacting with C/EBPα, a key transcription factor that controls miR-223 biogenesis, and subsequently elevated miR-223 expression in neutrophils. Importantly, down-regulation of SIRT1 and miR-223 expression was also observed in circulating neutrophils from middle-aged and elderly subjects compared with those from young individuals. Chronic alcohol users with acute intoxication had a reduction in neutrophilic SIRT1 expression in young and middle-aged patients, with a greater reduction in the latter group. The neutrophilic SIRT1 expression correlated with neutrophilic miR-223 and serum alanine transaminase levels in those patients. Conclusions: Aging increases the susceptibility of alcohol-induced liver injury in mice and humans through the down-regulation of the neutrophilic SIRT1-C/EBPα-miR-223 axis, which could be a therapeutic target for the prevention and/or treatment of ALD.Item Alcohol abstinence ameliorates the dysregulated immune profiles in patients with alcoholic hepatitis: A prospective observational study(Wiley, 2017) Li, Wei; Amet, Tohti; Xing, Yanyan; Yang, Dennis; Liangpunsakul, Suthat; Puri, Puneet; Kamath, Patrick; Sanyal, Arun; Shah, Vijay; Katz, Barry; Radaeva, Svetlana; Crabb, David; Chalasani, Naga; Yu, Qigui; Department of Microbiology and Immunology, IU School of MedicineAlcoholic hepatitis (AH) develops in only a small proportion of heavy drinkers. To better understand the mechanisms underlying this disparity, we conducted a study to define the relationship between AH development and dysregulated immune responses that might be ameliorated by alcohol abstinence. Sixty-eight AH patients, 65 heavy drinking controls without liver disease (HDC), and 20 healthy controls were enrolled and followed up to 12 months. At baseline, HDC and healthy controls had no significant differences in their plasma levels of 38 inflammatory cytokines/chemokines measured using multiplex immunoassays. However, compared to HDC, AH patients had higher baseline levels of 11 cytokines/chemokines (tumor necrosis factor alpha, interleukin 6 [IL-6], IL-8, interferon gamma–induced protein 10, IL-4, IL-9, IL-10, fibroblast growth factor 2, IL-7, IL-15, and transforming growth factor alpha) but lower levels of the anti-inflammatory macrophage-derived chemokine. AH patients also had more activated yet dysfunctional immune cells as monocytes, T cells, and B cells expressed higher levels of cluster of differentiation 38 (CD38) and CD69 but low levels of human leukocyte antigen DR, CD80, and CD86 at baseline. In addition, CD4 T cells produced less interferon-gamma in response to T-cell stimulation. Up-regulated IL-6, IL-8, CD38, and CD69 and down-regulated macrophage-derived chemokine, human leukocyte antigen DR, CD86, and CD80 correlated positively and negatively, respectively, with disease severity. Longitudinal analysis indicated that levels of IL-6, IL-8, CD38, and CD69 were reduced, whereas levels of macrophage-derived chemokine, human leukocyte antigen DR, CD80, and CD86 were increased in abstinent AH patients. All of the cellular immune abnormalities were reversed by day 360 in abstinent AH patients; however, plasma levels of tumor necrosis factor alpha, IL-8, IL-10, fibroblast growth factor 2, and IL-7 remained higher. Conclusion: AH patients were in a highly immune-dysregulated state, whereas HDC showed little evidence of immune activation; alcohol abstinence reversed most, but not all, of the immunological abnormalities.Item Alcohol Abstinence Does Not Fully Reverse Abnormalities of Mucosal-Associated Invariant T Cells in the Blood of Patients With Alcoholic Hepatitis(Wolters Kluwer, 2019-06) Li, Wei; Lin, Edward L.; Liangpunsakul, Suthat; Lan, Jie; Chalasani, Sai; Rane, Sushmita; Puri, Puneet; Kamath, Patrick S.; Sanyal, Arun J.; Shah, Vijay H.; Radaeva, Svetlana; Crabb, David W.; Chalasani, Naga; Yu, Qigui; Microbiology & Immunology, IU School of MedicineOBJECTIVES: Alcoholic hepatitis (AH) develops in approximately 30% of chronic heavy drinkers. The immune system of patients with AH is hyperactivated, yet ineffective against infectious diseases. Mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells are innate-like lymphocytes that are highly enriched in liver, mucosa, and peripheral blood and contribute to antimicrobial immunity. We aimed to determine whether MAIT cells were dysregulated in heavy drinkers with and without AH and the effects of alcohol abstinence on MAIT cell recovery. METHODS: MR1 tetramers loaded with a potent MAIT cell ligand 5-(2-oxopropylideneamino)-6-d-ribitylaminouracil were used in multiparameter flow cytometry to analyze peripheral blood MAIT cells in 59 healthy controls (HC), 56 patients with AH, and 45 heavy drinkers without overt liver disease (HDC) at baseline and 6- and 12-month follow-ups. Multiplex immunoassays were used to quantify plasma levels of cytokines related to MAIT cell activation. Kinetic Turbidimetric Limulus Amebocyte Lysate Assay and ELISA were performed to measure circulating levels of 2 surrogate markers for bacterial translocation (lipopolysaccharide and CD14), respectively. RESULTS: At baseline, patients with AH had a significantly lower frequency of MAIT cells than HDC and HC. HDC also had less MAIT cells than HC (median 0.16% in AH, 0.56% in HDC, and 1.25% in HC). Further, the residual MAIT cells in patients with AH expressed higher levels of activation markers (CD69, CD38, and human leukocyte antigen [HLA]-DR), the effector molecule granzyme B, and the immune exhaustion molecule PD-1. Plasma levels of lipopolysaccharide and CD14 and several cytokines related to MAIT cell activation were elevated in patients with AH (interferon [IFN]-α, interleukin [IL]-7, IL-15, IL-17, IL-18, IL-23, IFN-γ, and tumor necrosis factor α). Decreased MAIT cell frequency and upregulated CD38, CD69, and HLA-DR correlated negatively and positively, respectively, with aspartate aminotransferase level. MAIT cell frequency negatively correlated with IL-18. HLA-DR and CD38 levels correlated with several cytokines. At follow-ups, abstinent patients with AH had increased MAIT cell frequency and decreased MAIT cell activation. However, MAIT cell frequency was not fully normalized in patients with AH (median 0.31%). DISCUSSION: We showed that HDC had a reduction of blood MAIT cells despite showing little evidence of immune activation, whereas patients with AH had a severe depletion of blood MAIT cells and the residual cells were highly activated. Alcohol abstinence partially reversed those abnormalities.