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Intrahepatic cholangitis and arteritis after transcatheter arterial embolization in a patient with tumor-like lesion-associated autoimmune hepatitis.
Autoimmune hepatitis is a chronic liver disease characterized by immune-mediated, progressive hepatocellular damage, although the target autoantigen remains speculative. Intrahepatic biliary lesions are not a feature of this disease. We describe herein a female patient, 57 years, with autoimmune hepatitis who developed hepatic regenerative mass after acute exacerbation of hepatitis. This hepatic regenerative mass was clinically diagnosed as hepatocellular carcinoma and was surgically resected after transcatheter arterial embolization therapy. Widespread nonsuppurative destructive granulomatous cholangitis as well as necrotizing, granulomatous arteritis of the intrahepatic small arteries were found in the surgically resected hepatic regenerative mass. The bile duct lesions were histologically and immunohistochemically very similar to the granulomatous cholangitis of primary biliary cirrhosis. We would like to propose that these unusual lesions in the intrahepatic bile ducts and intrahepatic arteries represent a reaction of this patient to an anti-cancer drug included in chemoembolization. No such cases have been reported so far.
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