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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Copper-related chronic liver disease in Cavalier King Charles spaniels

By Nivy, Ran et al.·Published in The Veterinary record·2024·Ben-Shemen Specialist Referral Centre·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Copper-associated chronic hepatitis in Cavalier King Charles spaniels.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of Cavalier King Charles Spaniels (CKCS) with liver disease were found to have copper buildup in their livers, leading to symptoms like elevated liver enzymes and portal hypertension (increased blood pressure in the liver). Genetic testing revealed that most of these dogs carried a specific variant linked to this condition. For those that received chelation therapy, which helps remove excess copper, five out of seven showed improvement in their liver function and blood pressure. Unfortunately, six dogs that did not receive this treatment did not survive.

People also search for: Cavalier King Charles Spaniel liver disease · copper-associated chronic hepatitis treatment · CKCS liver function tests

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Copper-associated chronic hepatitis (CuCH) is poorly characterised in Cavalier King Charles spaniels (CKCS). METHODS: Hepatic copper accumulation was qualitatively and quantitatively assessed, and blood samples were used for genetic testing to screen for known CuCH-associated genetic variants. RESULTS: The study included 13 CKCS with CuCH and eight unaffected controls. Increased transaminase activities, elevated biliary enzyme concentrations and portal hypertension were documented in 100%, 73% and 38% of dogs with CuCH, respectively. Five dogs had three or more abnormalities in measures of liver function. All 11 dogs with CuCh that underwent genetic testing were homozygous negative for the COMMD1 deletion and ATP7A variant but homozygous positive (n = 7) or heterozygous (n = 4) for the ATP7B variant. Liver histology often demonstrated marked architectural distortion by severe, bridging fibrosis and regenerative nodules with lymphoplasmacytic inflammation. Centrilobular copper accumulation characterised early cases with minimal fibrosis. When fibrosis was significant, copper was often differentially concentrated within regenerative nodules. Chelation therapy resolved laboratory derangements and portal hypertension in five of seven dogs. Of the 7 non-surviving dogs with CuCH, 6 had not received chelation therapy. LIMITATIONS: Limitations include a small cohort size and the lack of pedigree analyses to corroborate heritability. CONCLUSIONS: CuCH should be considered in CKCS with suspected liver disease. Long-term prognosis seems favourable in dogs receiving chelation therapy, notwithstanding the presence of previously reported negative prognostic markers.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37926771/