Dallas
214-456-2361
Fax: 214-456-2563
Providers at our Claude Prestidge Cystic Fibrosis Center are experts in monitoring and managing Cystic Fibrosis Liver Disease (CFLD). Our expert team can help your child live the healthiest, most active life possible.
Our team includes experts from many disciplines, including specialists with experience in liver disease (gastroenterologists/hepatologists). Combining our varied expertise into one clinic helps us monitor for this condition more regularly. This means we can intervene as soon as your child needs help, which can ensure a healthier life with fewer medical complications.
214-456-2361
Fax: 214-456-2563
Cystic fibrosis liver disease is damage to the liver caused by cystic fibrosis (CF), a chronic condition caused by a gene mutation.
In the past 20 years, treatments for CF have improved dramatically and people are living longer than ever. Still, CF can cause serious damage to the liver over time. But CFLD has become more recognized in recent years.
CFLD can take many forms. If your child has more severe genetic mutations for cystic fibrosis, they may have an increased risk of developing CFLD, and possibly a more severe form. The age at which your child develops CFLD may also affect how severe it can become.
There are two main types of mild CFLD:
In older children and adults, more severe forms of CFLD include:
Many children don't show signs of CFLD until puberty because symptoms don’t typically appear until the damage to their liver has advanced. That’s why we evaluate the liver health of all children with cystic fibrosis every year. Our proactive approach helps us identify damage to your child’s liver as early as possible, and closely monitor it once it starts. This annual evaluation includes:
CFLD is caused by cystic fibrosis (CF), an inherited disorder that causes your child’s mucus and digestive fluids to become sticky and thick. If CF slows the digestive fluids (bile) from leaving your child’s liver, it can cause inflammation and scarring.
CFLD is more common in males, people with a history of bowel obstructions in infancy and those who inherited more severe mutations of the gene that causes cystic fibrosis.
CFLD cannot be cured, but our team can help you and your child manage the condition. Our main goal is to prevent further liver damage and help children live a comfortable, independent and active life. Depending on your child’s needs they might receive:
Our team is helping develop effective new treatments for CFLD. We are working with the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation to create care guidelines for the disorder, which could lead to new surgical procedures to help your child’s liver function better.
Our seasoned team of specialists will work together and with your family to treat your child’s CFLD in a holistic way that prioritizes their overall health.
Not necessarily. A liver transplant is only necessary in advanced cases. Early intervention and monitoring disease progression can help your child’s liver remain as healthy as possible. Surgical shunt procedures can sometimes help improve complications and prevent the need for liver transplants.
It depends on how severe their CFLD has become. If it is not progressing, your child’s life expectancy should not be impacted by CFLD. If it is, your child may need a liver transplant and that could change your child’s life expectancy.