What Is Primary Biliary Cholangitis (PBC)?
Your liver helps your body digest food and removes toxins from your blood. Bile, a fluid that your liver makes, helps with these actions.
Bile moves into your body through small bile ducts inside your liver known as the intrahepatic bile ducts.
PBC is a disease that destroys these bile ducts over time. When bile can no longer move through the ducts, liver damage occurs.
PBC is not a very common disease.
It affects about:
- 65 out of 100,000 U.S. women.
- 12 out of 100,000 U.S. men.
Primary biliary cholangitis causes
It's not clear why some people get PBC. Doctors think it's an autoimmune disease in which the body's own immune system attacks the liver.
Researchers don't think parents pass PBC to their children through gene changes, but it sometimes occurs in several family members.
PBC risk factors and complications
PBC is more common in women than men, especially women over the age of 40.
If you have PBC, you're at higher risk for other health issues like:
- Osteoporosis, or thinning bones.
- High cholesterol, a fatty substance in the blood that causes harmful plaque to form in the arteries.
- Cirrhosis and complications.
- Liver failure, or end-stage liver disease.
Why choose the UPMC Center for Liver Care for primary biliary cholangitis care?
Our liver experts:
- Develop advanced therapies for people with PBC.
- Care for all types of liver conditions with treatment options tailored to you.
- Work closely with the UPMC Liver Transplant Program, a national leader in living-donor liver transplants.