# Management of Hepatic Sarcoidosis: A Retrospective Analysis of Patients at a University Hospital

**Authors:** Manush Sondhi, Sulman Hasan, Kavya Vadlamudi, Mohammad Alfrad Nobel Bhuiyan, Anusheh Ali, Tabitha Muutu, Samina Hayat, Sarwat Umer, Kinza Muzaffar

PMC · DOI: 10.31138/mjr.111124.thr · Mediterranean Journal of Rheumatology · 2025-07-17

## TL;DR

This study examines how well different medications work for treating hepatic sarcoidosis, finding that infliximab had the best response rate.

## Contribution

The study provides real-world efficacy data on various medications for hepatic sarcoidosis, highlighting infliximab's superior performance.

## Key findings

- Infliximab showed a 66% response rate, the highest among tested medications.
- Steroids were the most commonly used treatment, with a 55% response rate.
- Only 27% of patients underwent liver biopsy, and UDC was used in just 3% despite recommendations.

## Abstract

To explore efficacy of medications, namely steroids, ursodeoxycholic acid (UDC), methotrexate (MTX), azathioprine, mycophenolate mofetil (MMF), and infliximab in the treatment of hepatic sarcoidosis (HS).

We searched for the patients using ICD codes for sarcoidosis (ICD-10: D86) and granulomatous hepatitis (ICD-10: K75.3) at Louisiana State University, Shreveport, and generated 150 unique medical record numbers. We retrospectively reviewed notes, labs, imaging, and medications, and used descriptive statistics to calculate percentages.

47 patients had a diagnosis of HS. 72% of patients had ALP elevation of >200. 36 (76%) patients received steroids, 20 (42%) had MTX, 5 (10%) had azathioprine, 5 (10%) had rituximab, 12 (25%) had infliximab, 3 (6%) had UDC, 21 (44%) had MMF. 12 patients received a combination of prednisone with either MTX, azathioprine, MMF, infliximab, or rituximab. Treatment response was measured based on ALP improvement. 55% of patients responded to prednisone, 45% to MTX, 40% to azathioprine, 60% to rituximab, 66% to infliximab, 47% to MMF, and 30% to UDC.

Majority of the patients presented with ALP elevation of >200. Liver biopsy was performed in only 27% of the patients. Despite being one of the recommended initial therapies, UDC was used in only 3% of patients. Steroids were most commonly used. Among all the steroid-sparing agents, infliximab showed the best efficacy. Similarly, MTX showed improvement, but it was generally avoided due to the risk of hepatotoxicity. Azathioprine, MMF, and rituximab were used either in combination or as sole therapies and have shown improvement in ALP.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** ursodeoxycholic acid (PubChem CID 31401), methotrexate (PubChem CID 4112), azathioprine (PubChem CID 2265), mycophenolate mofetil (PubChem CID 5281078)
- **Diseases:** granulomatous hepatitis (MONDO:0002252)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** ATHS (atherosclerosis susceptibility (lipoprotein associated)) [NCBI Gene 470] {aka ALP}
- **Diseases:** granulomatous hepatitis (MESH:D006099), HS (MESH:D012507)
- **Chemicals:** MTX (MESH:D008727), UDC (MESH:D014580), Azathioprine (MESH:D001379), rituximab (MESH:D000069283), prednisone (MESH:D011241), infliximab (MESH:D000069285), MMF (MESH:D009173), Steroids (MESH:D013256)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

17 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12536739/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12536739