4.3 Article

Primary Biliary Cholangitis in Males Pathogenesis, Clinical Presentation, and Prognosis

Journal

CLINICS IN LIVER DISEASE
Volume 26, Issue 4, Pages 643-655

Publisher

W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cld.2022.06.008

Keywords

Primary biliary cholangitis; Autoimmune hepatitis; Men; Epidemiology; Clinical presentation; Prognosis

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PBC, although more prevalent in females, has shown to be more common in males than previously believed. Men tend to present at a later stage of the disease and have a higher risk of death or transplantation, even after adjusting for various factors. There is a need for greater research and education to raise awareness and improve early detection among males with PBC.
PBC remains a female predominant disease, but the disease is more prevalent in males than previously believed, with contemporary studies showing a 4-6:1 female-to-male ratio. Men present later in disease process, as evidenced by older age, higher bilirubin, lower platelet count, higher model for end-stage liver disease -Na, and lower UDCA exposure-time in several studies. Although males present at a more advanced stage of disease at diagnosis than females, male sex has been shown to be associated with a higher death or transplantation, or liver-related death or transplantation in PBC cirrhosis, even after adjusting for age, comorbidities, UDCA response, and the stage of disease. A diagnosis of PBC is often delayed among males because of the myth that PBC is extremely rare in males. Greater research and education are needed to raise awareness, so that PBC is suspected and diagnosed at an earlier stage among males.

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