Seronegative autoimmune hepatitis (SnAIH) lacks detectable conventional autoantibodies (ANA, SMA, anti-LKM, anti-LC1, and anti-SLA/LP), posing diagnostic challenges. Increasing evidence suggests SnAIH in adults reflects limitations in autoantibody detection rather than a distinct variant. We systematically re-evaluated all biopsy-proven SnAIH cases in a large international multicenter AIH cohort using standardized testing. Among 760 patients with baseline liver biopsy, 52 (6.8%) were initially classified as SnAIH. Forty-three lacked complete autoantibody testing, most commonly anti-SLA/LP. After comprehensive re-evaluation, only 9 patients (1.18%) fulfilled criteria for true SnAIH. All presented acutely with markedly elevated transaminases (median ALT 16.1 & times; ULN); five had elevated IgG levels. Histology suggestive of autoimmune-like drug-induced liver injury was observed in four cases. All but one relapsed after treatment withdrawal, and 42.9% failed to normalize ALT at six months. In conclusion, SnAIH is rare (similar to 1%), highlighting the importance of standardized, comprehensive autoantibody testing and re-testing according to the guidelines.

Seronegative Autoimmune Hepatitis in Adults Is a Rare Entity Often Obscured by Suboptimal Diagnostic Assessment

Colapietro, Francesca;Ronca, Vincenzo;Lleo, Ana
2026-01-01

Abstract

Seronegative autoimmune hepatitis (SnAIH) lacks detectable conventional autoantibodies (ANA, SMA, anti-LKM, anti-LC1, and anti-SLA/LP), posing diagnostic challenges. Increasing evidence suggests SnAIH in adults reflects limitations in autoantibody detection rather than a distinct variant. We systematically re-evaluated all biopsy-proven SnAIH cases in a large international multicenter AIH cohort using standardized testing. Among 760 patients with baseline liver biopsy, 52 (6.8%) were initially classified as SnAIH. Forty-three lacked complete autoantibody testing, most commonly anti-SLA/LP. After comprehensive re-evaluation, only 9 patients (1.18%) fulfilled criteria for true SnAIH. All presented acutely with markedly elevated transaminases (median ALT 16.1 & times; ULN); five had elevated IgG levels. Histology suggestive of autoimmune-like drug-induced liver injury was observed in four cases. All but one relapsed after treatment withdrawal, and 42.9% failed to normalize ALT at six months. In conclusion, SnAIH is rare (similar to 1%), highlighting the importance of standardized, comprehensive autoantibody testing and re-testing according to the guidelines.
2026
autoantibodies
autoimmune hepatitis
seronegative
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11699/106288
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