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Fontan-Associated Liver Disease: Evidence for Early Surveillance of Liver Health in Pediatric Fontan Patients.

The growing awareness of Fontan-associated liver disease (FALD) in adults with Fontan physiology has provided the impetus to better understand the natural history of FALD and develop a reliable noninvasive method to diagnose and monitor liver health in this population. Biochemical and imaging tests have been investigated to determine their association with liver pathology. The congestive hepatopathy that develops after the Fontan procedure has made interpreting these tests challenging. We have reviewed and summarized the current understanding and ongoing challenges with respect noninvasive measures of liver health in Fontan patients including biochemical tests, elastography, hepatic ultrasound, cross-sectional imaging, and hemodynamics and how they relate to liver pathology. It has been demonstrated from biopsy data that liver disease is universal and progressive in Fontan patients. Traditional biochemical tests, elastography, and imaging methods are often abnormal in Fontan patients but do not reliably indicate significant liver pathology. Although a reliable means for surveillance of FALD remains elusive, this continues to be an active area of investigation, with promising recent developments. Therapeutic options for FALD are limited, with cardiac transplant as the only option that can stabilize FALD pathology and improve symptomatology. Given the limited therapeutic options and the prevalence of liver disease in Fontan patients, there is a compelling case for early routine surveillance of liver health and promotion of global liver health.

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