most specific laboratory test for intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy is measurement of plasma or serum concentration of total bile acids, which will usually include cholic or chenodeoxycholic acid: values may be 10 to 100 times those found in healthy pregnant women
increases in serum transaminases are also common
unlike in other cholestatic diseases, increases in serum gamma glutamyl transferase (GGT) are less common (1)
if there is clinical uncertainty about the diagnosis of ICP, particularly with asymptomatic clinical presentation, then other investigations should be considered
upper abdominal ultrasound can be performed to exclude gallbladder disease, duct dilatation and other liver pathology
histological confirmation of acinar cholestasis and bile plugs is unnecessary except in atypical cases when symptoms start before 20 weeks, jaundice precedes pruritus, and itching persists after delivery
other causes of pruritus and jaundice require exclusion, especially gall stones, primary biliary cirrhosis, sclerosing cholangitis, viral hepatitis, autoimmune chronic active hepatitis, and drug hepatotoxicity
serology for hepatitis A, B, C, Epstein Barr virus (EBV) and cytomegalovirus (CMV) can help to exclude viral pathology, while an autoimmune screen including anti-smooth muscle, liver-kidney microsomal (LKM) and antimitochondrial antibodies can help to identify women with chronic active hepatitis or primary biliary cholangitis
Notes
in clinical practice, otherwise unexplained abnormalities in transaminases, gamma-glutamyl transferase and/or bile salts are considered sufficient to support the diagnosis of obstetric cholestasis
the increase in alkaline phosphatase in pregnancy is usually placental in origin and so does not normally reflect liver disease
bilirubin is raised only infrequently and most women will have increased levels of one or more of the remaining LFTs
for defining abnormality in LFTs and bile salts, the upper limit of pregnancy-specific ranges should be applied
for transaminases,gamma-glutamyl transferase and bilirubin, the upper limit of normal throughout pregnancy is 20% lower than the non-pregnant range
bile acid levels can rise significantly after a meal, so while fasting might give lower values and help the diagnosis to be avoided in a few women with otherwise normal LFT, in the majority of studies and in clinical practice random levels are generally used
some women will have pruritus for days or weeks before the development of abnormal liver function: in those with persistent unexplained pruritus and normal biochemistry, LFTs should be measured every 1–2 weeks
isolated elevation of bile salts may occur but this is uncommon; normal levels of bile salts do not exclude the diagnosis
Reference:
Walker KF et al. Pharmacological interventions for treating intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2020, Issue 7. Art. No.: CD000493. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD000493.pub3.
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