Objective: To establish the prevalence of liver focal pathology in patients with increase of alkaline phosphatase and gamma-glutamil transpeptidase and normal bilirubin (dissociated cholestasis), and to analyze the related risk factors for such pathology.
Methods: All laboratory studies of patients admitted to an Internal Medicine Department were reviewed prospectively throughout a period of 9 months. For the purpose of detecting focal liver pathology imaging liver studies (echography and/or CT) were carried out in those in which biochemical analyses showed dissociated cholestasis.
Results: A dissociated cholestasis pattern was found in 81 patients. In 13 of them (16%) focal liver pathology was demonstrated. The majority of the lesions (10 of 13) were local or metastatic malignant neoplasms. Sex, alcohol consumption, presence of diabetes mellitus, tumor or hepatobiliar disease previously known, or abnormalities in liver physical examination were not risk factors. No liver pathology was found in patients with an alkaline phosphatase level higher than double of gamma-glutamil transpeptidase level (sensitivity: 100%; negative predictive value: 100%). Diagnosis of a non-hepatic malignant neoplasm at discharge was associated to a risk 12 times bigger for the presence of liver lesions (p < 0.01).
Conclusions: It is uncommon to find focal liver pathology in patients with dissociated cholestasis. It is more common to discover focal liver pathology in patients with non-hepatic tumors and less probable when phosphatase alcaline: gamma-glutamil transpeptidase ratio is higher than two.