Pasha SB, Swi A, Hammoud GM. Gastrointestinal and hepatic manifestations of COVID-19 infection: Lessons for practitioners. World J Meta-Anal 2020; 8(5): 348-374 [DOI: 10.13105/wjma.v8.i5.348]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Ghassan M Hammoud, MD, MPH Professor, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, University of Missouri School of Medicine, 1 Hospital Drive, Columbia, MO 65212, United States. hammoudg@health.missouri.edu
Research Domain of This Article
Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Article-Type of This Article
Evidence Review
Open-Access Policy of This Article
This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Table 6 Commonly administered pharmacotherapy for coronavirus disease 2019 and their gastrointestinal adverse effects[162]
Drug
Proposed mechanism in COVID-19
GI side effects
Hepatic side effects
Pancreatic side effects
Remdesivir
Inhibitor of viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase.
Nausea, Vomiting, gastroparesis, GI bleeding
Increased LFTs
NA
Chloroquine and Hydroxychloroquine
Disruption of endosome-mediated viral entry and transport.
Nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramping
NA
NA
Lopinavir/Ritonavir
Protease inhibitor. Disrupts viral replication.
Diarrhea, nausea, vomiting
LFT elevation, hepatitis, worsening of underlying CLD
Pancreatitis
Ribavirin
Nucleoside analog inhibitor of viral RNA synthesis.
Nausea
NA
NA
Nitazoxanide
Increase production of type I IFNs enhancing antiviral activity.
Abdominal pain, nausea, diarrhea, acid reflux
NA
NA
Nelfinavir
HIV-1 protease inhibitor. Action against SARS-CoV-2 unclear.
Diarrhea, nausea, increased flatulence
LFT elevation
NA
INF-α
Enhances cell mediated immune response against the virus.
NA
Auto-immune hepatitis
NA
Barcitinib
JAK inhibitor. Downregulation of hyper-inflammatory state seen in severe disease.
Nausea
LFT elevation
NA
Tocilizumab
IL-6 inhibitor. Downregulation of hyper-inflammatory state seen in severe disease.
Gastrointestinal perforation in patients on high dose steroids or history of diverticulitis
LFT elevation
NA
Table 7 Selected American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, Asian Pacific Association for the Study of the Liver, and European Association for the Study of the Liver recommendations for liver disease management during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic[164]
Selected recommendations
To limit nosocomial spread
(1) Limit in-person visits by effective triaging; (2) Use of virtual platforms such as telehealth to provide alternatives for in-person visits; (3) Symptom and exposure screening prior to entering the healthcare facility to identify at-risk individuals; (4) Minimize staffing to essential staff only; (5) Decrease frequency of laboratory and imaging monitoring; (6) Ensure adherence to recommended PPE by HCW and patients; (7) Ensure adequate social distancing at the healthcare facility (Remodel if necessary); (8) Postpone and delay nonurgent or elective procedures (refer to Table 12); and (9) Minimize research activities including clinical trials wherever possible.
Management of CLD patients with COVID-19
(1) Early hospital admission is recommended for these patients; (2) Prioritization of COVID-19 testing for cirrhotics, CLD patients on immunosuppressive therapy and those with acute decompensation; (3) Frequent LFT monitoring is recommended; (4) Consider early enrollment in clinical trial when possible; (5) Include non-COVID-19 etiologies in differentials for liver dysfunction; (6) Pay special attention to COVID-19 patients with NAFLD, which is often associated with severe COVID-19; (7) Consider hepatitis B surface antigen screening; (8) Monitor for drug induced liver injury; (9) 2-3 g/d of acetaminophen is generally safe and can be used in these patients. NSAIDs can also be used as needed but limit their use whenever possible; (10) Consider HBV prophylaxis prior to initiating immunosuppressive medications, especially IL-6; and (11) Hold Remdesivir in patients with decompensated liver disease and ALT > 5 × ULN.
Management of chronic viral hepatitis (HCV and HBV)
(1) Continuing treatment for chronic HCV and HBV despite COVID-19 status is recommended; (2) Can hold initiating treatment for HBV in the absence of flare; and (3) Treatment for HCV and HBV in the uninfected should continue according to established guidelines.
Management of HCC
(1) Based on the risk and benefit, a delay in surveillance of up to 2 mo is acceptable for high risk individuals; (2) Continuation of HCC treatment per guidelines is recommended, however can be postponed if necessary; (3) For COVID-19 patients, can consider postponing elective transplant and resection surgery and withholding immunotherapy; and (4) Early inpatient admission is advised for HCC patients.
Management of pre- and post- transplant recipients
(1) Screening of both, the donor and recipient for COVID-19 is recommended; (2) Donors testing positive for COVID-19 should be deferred; (3) CMS has classified transplant surgeries as Tier 3b. As such, these procedures should not be postponed or delayed; (4) Patients with poor short-term prognosis should be prioritized; (5) Low threshold for admitting transplant listed COVID-19 patients to the hospital is recommended; (6) For post-transplant patients, immunosuppressive dose reductions can be considered in moderate COVID-19 cases. For mild COVID-19 cases no immunosuppressive dose reduction is advised; and (7) Vaccination against pneumonia and influenza is recommended in post-transplant recipients.
Table 8 Expert guidance for management of autoimmune liver disease during coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic[168]
Selected recommendations from EASL, AASLD for management of auto-immune hepatitis
(1) In-person visits should be minimized as much as possible. Switch to virtual platforms whenever possible; and (2) COVID-19 testing is recommended in cases of acute decompensation and liver failure.
Low risk of complications (stable patient on chronic immunosuppressive treatment)
(1) Frequent patient-provider communications for close monitoring; (2) Use of virtual platforms should be preferred whenever possible; and (3) Ensure adequate drug supply and refills to reduce running out of medications.
Moderate risk of complications (symptomatic disease in the absence of cirrhosis, compensated cirrhosis)
(1) Can empirically treat via virtual healthcare platform whenever possible; and (2) Avoiding liver biopsy whenever possible is also recommended.
High risk of complications (acute flare, decompensated cirrhosis)
(1) Minimize invasive procedures wherever possible; (2) In COVID-19 patients, dose reduction of antimetabolites is recommended if lymphopenia develops; and (3) In case of infection corticosteroids should be tapered as quickly as possible.
Table 9 Expert guidance on immunosuppression for liver disease in the setting of coronavirus disease 2019[168]
Selected recommendations from AASLD and EASL on use of immunosuppressive therapies in CLD patients
(1) Initiating corticosteroids and immunosuppressive therapy should be preceded; and (2) by careful risk vs benefit assessment.
Patients uninfected by COVID-19 on immunosuppressive therapy
Dosage reductions or adjustment is not advised.
Patients infected with COVID-19 on immunosuppressive therapy
(1) Corticosteroid dose reductions after specialist consultation (consider tapering to avoid adrenal insufficiency); and (2) Dose reductions in azathioprine, cyclosporine, mycophenolate is recommended in severe COVID-19 (especially with accompanying lymphopenia).
Patients requiring initiation of immunosuppressive therapy
Initiating treatment is recommended in these patients regardless of COVID-19 status.
Table 10 Recommendations on use of immunosuppressive therapies in inflammatory bowel diseases[169]
Asymptomatic infection
Mild to moderate infection
Severe or Critical infection
Corticosteroids
(1) Dose reduction of Prednisone to < 20 mg/d; and (2) Consider switching to budesonide.
(1) Discontinue; and (2) Taper in chronic users.
Immunomodulators (thiopurines, methotrexate)
(1) Consider risks vs benefits; and (2) Can resume after 14 d in asymptomatic patients or when test negative.
Biologicals
(1) Consider risks vs benefits; (2) Can resume after 14 d in asymptomatic patients or when test negative; (3) Can decrease infusion frequencies for infliximab and vedolizumab; and (4) Tofacitinib and JAK inhibitors should be discontinued.
Table 11 Interim infection prevention and control guidelines by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention[172]
Interim Infection Prevention and Control guidelines by CDC
Encourage and promote Telehealth visits over in-person visits whenever possible.
COVID-19 symptom screening for everyone entering a healthcare facility.
Limiting entry points to a healthcare facility, ensuring effective screening for all.
Encourage hand hygiene and source control measures for everyone, especially HCWs.
Encourage physical distancing and limiting the number of visitors and personnel at any given time.
Implementing use of PPEs (e.g. N95/PAPR) for HCWs in areas with moderate to substantial community spread.
To mitigate spread from asymptomatic carriers; depending on the availability, a targeted SARS-CoV-2 testing for all patients can be considered.
To reduce exposures for HCWs the use of Engineering controls should be optimized.
Table 12 Procedures that can be delayed during the ongoing pandemic
Procedures that can be delayed
Procedures that cannot be delayed
Diagnostic procedures for mild/stable dysphagia[177].
Endoscopies for upper GI bleeding (Blatchford score > 1)[166,171,177].
Diagnostic procedures for suspected GI malignancy can be delayed for up to a few months[171].
Upper endoscopies for foreign body with severe/progressive dysphagia[177].
Routine surveillance and screening colonoscopies are non-urgent and can be postponed[171].
Lower endoscopies for acute obstruction requiring decompression[177].
Procedures for asymptomatic (with normal LFTs) gallstones and biliary strictures can be postponed[177].
ERCP for acute cholangitis or symptomatic common bile duct stone[166,177].
Follow up Colonoscopies for positive FIT test can be delayed for up to 7 to 9 mo without any adverse impact on outcomes[178].
Follow up band ligation for recent variceal bleeding[166,177].
Placement of percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy or jejunostomy tubes[177].
Procedures that can significantly impact medical decisions should be performed. These can include endoscopies for evaluation of high likelihood GI malignancies, resection of high-grade dysplasia or histologically proven neoplasia and investigation for IBD flares[171,177].
Colonoscopies for lower GI bleeding can be delayed up to 72 h without any change in outcome[178].
Liver biopsies to diagnose autoimmune hepatitis and transplant rejection in liver transplant patients[166].
Transplant surgeries are categorized Tier 3b by CMS and should be performed[175].
Endoscopic drainage of infected pancreatic fluid collections and necrosectomies[177].
Table 13 Recommended personal protective equipment during gastrointestinal procedures[171]
Recommendations for PPEs during GI procedures
Masks
Regardless of patient’s COVID-19 status, NIOSH approved N95/PAPR should be used by staff for any GI procedure.
Gloves
Regardless of patient’s COVID-19 status, gloves should be worn by providers during any GI procedure. Double gloves are preferred over single.
Negative Pressure Rooms
GI procedures for confirmed COVID-19 patients should be performed in negative pressure rooms when available.
Disinfection
Standard endoscope disinfectants can reduce microorganisms by 99.99% and should be sufficient for SARS-CoV-2.
Citation: Pasha SB, Swi A, Hammoud GM. Gastrointestinal and hepatic manifestations of COVID-19 infection: Lessons for practitioners. World J Meta-Anal 2020; 8(5): 348-374