Acute liver failure (ALF) is a condition with a high mortality and morbidity for which new treatments are desperately required. We contend that although the initial event in ALF is liver cell death, the clinical syndrome of ALF and its complications including multi-organ dysfunction and sepsis, are largely generated by the immune response to liver injury. Hepatic macrophages fulfil a diversity of roles in ALF, from pro-inflammatory to pro-resolution. Their inherent plasticity means the same macrophages may have a variety of functions depending on the local tissue environment at different stages of disease. A better understanding of the mechanisms that regulate macrophage plasticity during ALF will be an essential step towards realising the potential of immune-modulating therapies that re-orientate macrophages to promote the desirable functions of attenuating liver injury and promoting liver repair/regenerative responses. The key dynamics: temporal (early vs. late phase), regional (hepatic vs. systemic), and activation (pro-inflammatory vs. pro-resolution) are discussed and the potential for novel ALF therapies that modulate monocyte/macrophage function are described.
Keywords: Acute liver failure; Biomarkers; Macrophage; Monocyte; Plasticity.
Copyright © 2014 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.