LiverLearning®: 2019 Postgraduate Course: Precision Hepatology in Clinical Practice

DESCRIPTION The practice of Hepatology is largely consultative in nature, whether evaluating outpatients referred for a variety of abnormal liver enzyme findings or diagnosing and managing critically-ill patients within a team of internists, hospitalists, residents, intensivists, and other healthcare providers. On any given day, a hepatologist will be confronted with complex patients and dizzying differential diagnoses to be methodically considered. The aim of this course is to provide insights about state-of-the-art consultative Hepatology attendees that can be applied to daily practice.

LiverLearning®: 2019 Transplant Surgery Workshop: Liver Transplantation for NASH: Optimizing Outcomes

Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis has become a leading indication for liver transplantation in the United States and worldwide. At this symposium, faculty will review pre-transplant evaluation and assessment of comorbid conditions in these patients, early and long-term challenges after transplantation, patterns of recurrence of the disease and potentially preventive strategies.

LiverLearning®: AASLD/NASPGHAN Pediatric Symposium: New Endoscopic Frontiers in Liver Disease

At this symposium, experts on pediatric acute liver failure (PALF) will review the role of inflammation in etiopathogenesis of common comorbidities and discuss emerging topics in pediatric acute-on-chronic liver failure and extrahepatic support strategies. They will discuss the complexity of medical decision making in PALF and review indications for liver transplant in these patients.

LiverLearning®: 2019 Clinical Research Workshop: Microbiome as a Model of Clinical Research: From Stool to Study to Treatment

The microbiome is recognized as an important player in liver disease pathogenesis. The liver’s close proximity to the gut makes it particularly susceptible to changes in the intestinal microbiome. This workshop uses the microbiome as an example to facilitate appreciation of the tools available to perform clinical research, as well as specific research tactics for microbiome-related study.

LiverLearning®: Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease SIG: NAFLD Progression: A Cross Talk with Microbiome

At this symposium, experts share the latest advances in the research of the microbiome and its relationship with NAFLD. They will discuss the microbiome’s association with disease progression, fibrosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Topics covered will include the “cross talk” between obesity, the microbiome and NAFLD in both animal models and humans.

LiverLearning®: Hepatotoxicity SIG: Drug Induced Liver Injury: Assessing Risk and Predicting Outcome

Clinicians and translational researchers will glean approaches to assess drug induced liver injury (DILI) risk and predict outcomes at this session. Faculty will review basic hepatic drug metabolism in healthy and diseased livers, strategies to detect DILI during drug treatment and possible DILI risk factors, such as dose, duration, genetics and immunity. They will also share useful databases for clinicians.

LiverLearning®: Chronic Liver Failure SIG & Portal Hypertension SIG: Acute and Chronic Kidney Failure in Cirrhosis: Mechanisms to Management

This two-session program explores the pathophysiology, diagnosis and treatment of kidney failure in patients with cirrhosis. The first session reviews chronic kidney manifestations of portal hypertension, including sodium retention, ascites and chronic kidney failure. The second session discusses acute kidney injury in ACLF. Each part includes a case presentation to highlight management controversies, expert panel interviews and Q&A.

LiverLearning®: Hepatitis B SIG: Updates and Controversies in HBV: Management, HCC Surveillance and Emerging Therapies

This two-hour symposium explores chronic hepatitis B management in diverse populations. Topics include the changing global epidemiology and comorbidity of chronic hepatitis B, how to apply current practice guidelines in “gray” zones, HCC prevention strategies beyond the guidelines, emerging curative therapies and current strategies in HCC surveillance for hepatitis B, especially in younger, noncirrhotic persons from endemic areas.

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