Severe Acute Hepatitis in Children of Unknown Etiology

Published: June 28, 2022
Version 1.0

Authors:Vicky Ng*, Michelle Science*, Jordan Feld, Hemant Shah, Ari Bitnun, Laura Bourns, Aaron Campigotto, Eyal Cohen, Jonathan Gubbay, Carolina Jimenez-Rivera, Julia Orkin, Fahad Razak, Andrea Saunders, Blayne Sayed, Marina Salvadori, Barbara Yaffe, Austin Zygmunt, Upton Allen, on behalf of the Ontario COVID-19 Science Advisory Table

Key Message

Public health agencies have raised concern over cases of acute severe hepatitis of unknown etiology in children that have been reported worldwide. Surveillance has been implemented in several jurisdictions to identify cases, investigate etiologies and monitor trends to determine if there is a signal of concern. The relationship between the COVID-19 pandemic and the genesis of these reports is yet to be fully determined. Potential etiological hypotheses have included adenovirus and SARS-CoV-2 infection. However, to date, cases reported in the published literature have had inconsistent and incomplete testing sent, limiting the epidemiological investigation. 

Figure 1. Guidance for Healthcare Professionals on Evaluation of Children with Suspected Severe Acute Hepatitis
* Routine practices and Additional Precautions in All Health Care Settings, 3rd edition.2 Available at: https://www.publichealthontario.ca/en/health-topics/infection-prevention-control/routine-practices-additional-precautions
** The three pediatric transplant centers are The Hospital for Sick Children (Toronto, Ontario), Stollery Children’s Hospital (Edmonton, Alberta) and CHU Sainte-Justine (Montreal, Quebec). 
# See Section on “What tests should be completed” and https://www.publichealthontario.ca/en/Laboratory-Services/Test-Information-Index/Hepatitis-of-Unknown-Origin-in-Children
https://health.gov.on.ca/en/pro/programs/publichealth/acute_hepatitis/docs/CMOH_order_acute_hepatitis_2022_05_03.pdf

Clinicians need to be aware of how to recognize severity of acute hepatitis in children, what investigations to perform, and threshold to refer to a pediatric gastroenterologist or a liver transplant center. This document summarizes a pathway for the evaluation of children with severe acute hepatitis of unknown etiology and highlights the importance of immediately consulting with a pediatric gastroenterologist if the INR is elevated (greater or equal to than 1.5) and/or serum direct bilirubin is elevated to prioritize investigations and guide management. 

Summary

Background

A series of reports originating in Alabama, United States and Scotland in spring 2022 identified a potential concern about an increase in cases of acute severe hepatitis of unknown etiology in children.

Surveillance has been implemented across many jurisdictions globally to identify cases, investigate etiologies, and monitor trends. Given that these reports were emerging during the COVID-19 pandemic, a potential relationship between SARS-CoV-2 infection and acute severe hepatitis is important to explore, among other etiologies. However, many patients have not had complete workups reported in the literature, limiting the epidemiological investigation to date. 

Questions

How is severe acute hepatitis of unknown etiology in children defined? 

What are potential causes of severe acute hepatitis of unknown etiology in children?

What symptoms should make you suspect acute hepatitis in children?

What tests need to be prioritized and should be completed?

When should I refer?

Findings

Acute severe hepatitis is the sudden onset of liver inflammation and the most severe condition in the spectrum of severe acute hepatitis is pediatric acute liver failure (PALF). There is a broad differential diagnoses for severe acute hepatitis and PALF and it is important to ensure a thorough workup is sent and treatable conditions are recognized early. It is essential that clinicians are able to recognize severe acute hepatitis, decide which diagnostic tests to initiate and when to refer to a pediatric liver specialist or center. 

The presence of scleral icterus (yellow pigmentation of the white areas of the eye) or other signs of jaundice are more specific manifestations of severe hepatitis and symptoms that warrant urgent testing. Other less specific symptoms include dark urine and/or pale stools, skin irritation, easy bleeding/bruising, muscle aches, lethargic behaviour, loss of appetite, nausea and vomiting and fever. Recognition of these symptoms combined with a detailed medical history and followed by a combination of clinical, biochemical, radiological and histopathology studies can confirm a clinical diagnosis of acute severe hepatitis. 

To date, there is insufficient data to determine whether there has been a recent increase in the incidence of acute severe hepatitis in children. Furthermore, current surveillance data has not conclusively identified a specific infectious or non-infectious cause. A potential role for SARS-CoV-2 or adenovirus infection has been raised but remains unproven at the present time. Several other hypotheses being explored include drug, toxin or environmental exposure or any combination of factors. There is no evidence of a link between any SARS-CoV-2 vaccine with severe acute hepatitis in children, and the majority of cases to date have been among children less than 5 years of age and who were not yet vaccine eligible or who had not received a SARS-CoV-2 vaccine.  

Interpretation

The majority of children with acute hepatitis fully recover with supportive care, but the clinical course can be dynamic and can rarely progress to acute liver failure. Clinicians need to be aware of how to recognize severity of acute hepatitis in children, what investigations to initiate, and threshold to refer to a gastroenterologist or liver transplant center. More data is needed to explore a potential relationship between SARS-CoV-2 and adenovirus and acute severe hepatitis in children.

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