DAS Hepatology

University Clinic of Visceral Surgery and Medicine, Department of Hepatology, Inselspital, University Hospital Bern

The programme is intended for national and international graduates with a natural or medical science background interested in basic- and clinical- hepatology research. The program is aimed at improving the knowledge of the participants regarding the most relevant aspects of hepatology, both from a basic/translational and from a clinical standpoint.

Starting with key topics, articles and with clinical cases illustrating the translational aspects, the topic will be further explored by bedside-learning including face-to-face sessions with module leaders and tutors, self-guided learning, presentations, and assessments.

The possibility to tailor the tutoring to the specific needs of the attendant based on his/her background and expectations (i.e. natural sciences vs. medical sciences) is a major built-in advantage of our program.

A prerequisite for the DAS study course is a successfully completed CAS in Hepatology, During the DAS in Hepatology additional individual courses (lectures, workshops, symposia, retreats, etc.) in the field of hepatology will be attended. Finally, a DAS work in the form of a scientific paper that meets the requirements for an article in a peer-reviewed journal will have to be performed.

Summary
Degree Diploma of advanced Studies in Hepatology HEP University of Bern (DAS HEP Unibe)
Start 09/2020
Length September 2020 - August 2021
Scope 35 ECTS (including 15 ETCS from CAS Hepatology)
Cycle Annual
Flexible entry possible Yes
Single module visitable No
Place Bern
Due to the pandemic situation and the related official requirements, we would like to point out that individual course modules or parts of them can be replaced by distance learning or postponed.
Language German, English
Admission The prerequisite is a degree in medicine or natural sciences from a Swiss or foreign university as well as a Certificate of advanced Studies in Hepatology (CAS).
Cost CHF 10'000
Organising institutions University Clinic of Visceral Surgery and Medicine, Department of Hepatology, Inselspital, University Hospital Bern
Registration

The continuous education program Certificate and Diploma of Advanced Studies in Hepatology provides extensive insights into the basics of Hepatology by studying the physiological and pathophysiological of liver function in health and disease.

Target audience

The program is intended for national and international graduates with a natural or medical science background interested in basic- and clinical- hepatology research. The program is aimed at improving the knowledge of the participants regarding the most relevant aspects of hepatology, both from a basic/translational and from a clinical standpoint.

Structure

Starting with key topics, articles and with clinical cases illustrating the translational aspects, the topic will be further explored by bedside-learning including face-to-face sessions with module leaders and tutors, self-guided learning, presentations, and assessments.

The possibility to tailor the tutoring to the specific needs of the attendant based on his/her background and expectations (i.e. natural sciences vs. medical sciences) is a major built-in advantage of our program.

A prerequisite for the DAS study course is a successfully completed CAS in Hepatology. During the DAS in Hepatology additional    individual courses (lectures, workshops, symposia, retreats, etc.) in the field of hepatology will be attended.

Finally, a  DAS work in the form of a scientific paper that meets the requirements for an article in a peer-reviewed journal will have to be performed.

Module 1: General Hepatology

Participation in lectures, seminars and clinical sessions

  • Management of the outclinic patients with liver disease
  • Indications, contraindications and principles of common liver tests, including blood tests, ultrasound, elastography and liver biopsy

The educational goal of this module is to develop skills in the management of the ambulatory patients with liver disease in a cost-effective, pathophysiology-oriented, evidence-based and expedient manner. The fellow attending this module will deal with the most frequent liver diseases such as chronic viral hepatitis B or C, alcoholic liver disease, cholestatic liver diseases or autoimmune liver diseases. All these topics are crucial to the curriculum of the hepatologist. In this module the fellow will understand the indications, contraindications and principles common liver tests, including blood tests, ultrasound, elastography and liver biopsy.

The fellow will be asked to evaluate the patient information autonomously, will formulate a differential diagnosis and plan for further evaluation and treatment prior to the attending’s evaluation of the patient. The fellow them presents the case to the faculty member assigned to the outpatient clinic, and they will complete the patients’ visit together, outlining the final management plan. If important elements unknown at the time of the visit emerge later on, the fellow is responsible for communicating in writing and when necessary over the phone the decisions to the other physicians involved in the case. The fellow writes the report of the visit, which will be corrected by the faculty member. It is responsibility of the fellow to provide the reports in a timely manner. The fellows will track all the cases they are involved in on a specific log; this will allow them to prove their experience in the field.

The fellow attends the Interdisciplinary weekly discussion of cases. Among them, a particular relevance to this module is held by the meeting in which all liver biopsies performed in the previous week are discussed with the liver pathologist, and in which CT and/or MRI findings of difficult cases are reviewed with an expert radiologist. This will expose the fellow to the importance of a multidisciplinary approach in the field of hepatology.

Module 2:  Drugs and Liver metabolism

Participation in lectures, seminars and clinical sessions

This module is composed of the following 4 learning goals:

  • Use of the common drugs used in hepatology: This covers drugs to treat chronic liver diseases such as HBV anti-virals (lamivudine, tenofovir, entecavir), HCV anti-virals (polymerase inhibitors, protease inhibitors, NS5a inhibitors), immunosuppressors (prednisone, azathioprine, mycophenolate, calcineurin-inhibitors, mTOR-inhibitors), bile acids (ursodeoxycholic acid, obeticholic acid). The fellow gets familiar with the indications, contraindications, drug-drug interactions, dosages and monitoring/controls.
  • Principles of drug liver metabolism:  The fellow understands clinical pharmacology concepts such as the different hepatic phases of drug liver metabolism; the enzymatic polymorphisms relevant to drug metabolism and the drug which are affected; the effects of cirrhosis and ageing on hepatic drug metabolism as well as the hepatic first pass effect.
  • Drug induced liver injury (DILI): The fellow learns how to diagnose drug-induced liver injuries, the criteria to assess the likelihood of this diagnosis. The most common and important drug-induced liver injuries are specifically taught (antibiotics, anticoagulants, antiepileptics).
  • Alcoholic liver disease. The fellow expands his/her knowledge on the epidemiology, mechanisms and frequent complications of alcohol intake-associated liver disease.
  • Metabolic liver diseases, NAFLD/NASH, Wilson’s disease: The fellow will expand his/her knowledge on the management of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and the common genetic metabolic liver diseases such as hereditary hemochromatosis, Wilson’s disease, alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency. Diseases occurring in pregnancy will be discussed. Furthermore, gallstones disease and its management will be covered.

Module 3: Fibrosis, Cirrhosis and Vascular Liver Diseases 

Participation in lectures, seminars and clinical sessions

In this module the fellow learns the conceptual basis and techniques relevant to the assessment of liver fibrosis and liver perfusion. This will include:

  • Pathophysiology of fibrosis and cirrhosis: This will include the molecular processes and the pathophysiological consequences of fibrosis and cirrhosis.
  • Vascular liver diseases: Insight on the most important and frequent scenarios will be given: portal vein thrombosis, thrombosis of the hepatic veins (Budd-Chiari syndrome), idiopathic portal hypertension. The fellow will face the complexity of these diseases, and will learn how to diagnose them. The following three sub-modules are needed to complement this clinical knowledge.
    • Principles and hands-on: Transient elastography, other ultrasound elastography techniques.
      How to perform a liver and spleen stiffness measurement by transient elastography, and how to determine controlled attenuation parameter measurement by vibration-controlled transient elastography.
    • Principles and hands-on: Ultrasound, Doppler-ultrasound, contrast-enhanced ultrasound
      How to perform an ultrasound examination of the liver using B-mode, Doppler-US and contrast-enhanced ultrasound; portable point-of-care bedside ultrasonography. He/she will also learn how to measure liver and spleen stiffness by 2 dimensional real time shear wave elastography. All the examinations will be supervised by the staff member attending the ultrasound clinic, until the fellow is considered to have gained sufficient autonomy. The fellow will anyhow be able to ask the staff to supervise him/her in particularly complex cases.
    • The fellow should achieve a complete independency in the performance of transient elastography and basic diagnostic B-mode and Doppler ultrasound for liver disease. He will assist the staff in the performance of contrast-enhanced ultrasound and will participate in the interpretation of the images. The fellow will write the ultrasound report on the same day of the examination; the report will then be corrected by the responsible staff member.
    • Principles of percutaneous liver biopsy: The fellow will learn how to perform a percutaneous liver biopsy. The attending on call will directly supervise the entire procedure of liver biopsy, for all fellows regardless of level of training. However, as the fellow’s procedural proficiency increases, the level of independence in performing the procedure will increase accordingly.
      Other topics covered in this module include: indications to diagnostic and interventional endoscopy, interventional radiology and laparoscopy; radiological and nuclear medicine examination of liver and biliary tree.

Module 4: Advanced Liver Desease

Participation in lectures, seminars and clinical sessions

This module is composed of 3 parts integrating and further expanding the knowledge and skills gained in the previous modules, and will focus on severe liver disease. The three parts and respective learning objectives are described below:

  • Management of hospitalized patients.
    • 1.1. Fulminant liver failure
    • 1.2. Acute-on-chronic liver failure (including infections in cirrhosis)
    • 1.3. Renal failure in cirrhosis
    • 1.4. Hepatic encephalopathy
    • 1.5. Nutrition in liver disease

The fellow expands his readings and knowledge on this topic, and in parallel he/she develops skills in the management of hospitalized patient with liver disease in a cost-effective, pathophysiology-oriented, evidence-based and expedient manner under the supervision of the attending liver specialist who is on-call. A significant component of the learning experience comes from working in close collaboration with the attending on call. The fellow serves as a junior consultant and contact for residents, interns, and medical students who require assistance for managing patients with liver diseases.
The fellow perform an initial evaluation and formulate a differential diagnosis and plan for further evaluation and treatment prior to the attending’s evaluation of the patient. Together, the fellow and attending will arrange a time to meet in order for the attending to fully review the fellow’s evaluation of the patient and to supervise all necessary procedures. The attending will then evaluate the patient with the fellow, assuring accuracy of the available data, appropriateness of the diagnostic and therapeutic plan and communication of the final decisions to the medical team taking care of the patient. The fellow together with the staff member on call will write a consult note in the chart if necessary.
Topics specific to this sub-module include: fulminant liver failure; acute-on-chronic liver failure (including infections in cirrhosis); renal failure in cirrhosis; hepatic encephalopathy, nutrition in liver disease.

  • Hepatic hemodynamic procedures: Understand the indications, contraindications and principles of hepatic veins catheterization for hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG) measurement and transjugular liver biopsy
    The second educational goal of this module is to understand the indications, contraindications and principles of hepatic veins cathetherisation for hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG) measurement and transjugular liver biopsy. These are often needed in the setting of hospitalized patients with acute or acute-on-chronic liver disease.
     
  • Paracentesis: Understanding of how to perform a diagnostic and therapeutic paracentesis. Indications to albumin infusion; the fellow attends the monthly interventions board meeting and the bi-monthly meeting on portal hypertension and presents his/her cases.
    The third educational goal of this module is then to learn how to perform, interpret and follow-up a diagnostic and therapeutic paracentesis. The fellow reviews the indications with the attending on call and performs the paracentesis under supervision. Indications to albumin infusion and further therapeutic measures will be part of the learning content of this module.
    The fellow attends the monthly interventions board meeting and the bi-monthly meeting on portal hypertension and presents his/her cases.

Modul 5: Liver Transplantation and Liver Cancer

Participation in lectures, seminars and clinical sessions (tumorboard and OLT meeting)

This module is composed of 2 goals:

  • Liver Transplantation: The fellow expands his/her knowledge regarding the immunology of liver transplant (rejection, immunosuppressant drugs), the main indications and contraindications to this procedure, and the short- and long-term complications. In parallel, he sees and manages with an attending patients on the waiting list for liver transplantation as well as patients who underwent liver transplantation. The fellow gets familiar with the indications, and strategies to list and maintain patients on the waiting list. The fellow is involved in the care of pre- and post-transplantation phases. He also sees in the outpatient clinic patients who come for regular controls after transplantation. The fellow attends and participates actively at the weekly liver transplantation meeting.
  • Liver cancer:
    • HCC and ICC: clinical, histological and radiological aspects; update on therapy
    • Principles of percutaneous ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration/biopsy of focal liver lesions

Primary liver cancers concern a specific segment of patients with liver diseases. The diagnosis and staging of malignant liver tumors such as hepatocellular carcinoma and cholangiocarcinoma is taught. He/she will see how a percutaneous ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration/biopsy of focal liver lesions is performed. The fellow sees patients with these diagnoses under the supervision of an attending. He/she learns how to follow up these patients. The fellow attends the weekly tumor board meeting and presents his/her cases.

During the DAS in Hepatology additional individual courses (lectures, workshops, symposia, retreats, etc.) in the field of hepatology will be attended.

The programme in Hepatology was developed by the members of the Hepatology group of the University Clinic for Visceral Surgery and Medicine, at the University Hospital of Bern (Inselspital).

The Tutors are: Jean-Francois Dufour, Jaime Bosch, Annalisa Berzigotti, Nasser Semmo, Guido Stirnimann, Maria Gabriela Delgado, Susana Rodriguez.

To know more about us, please click the links below:

http://www.viszerale.insel.ch/
http://www.leberzentrum-bern.ch
http://www.dbmr.unibe.ch/
http://www.swissliver.ch

A master degree or equivalent in natural/medical science is required. A prerequisite for the DAS study course is also a successfully completed CAS in Hepatology. The courses are limited to a maximum of 3 persons per year.

Costs: 10'000 CHF

We don't offer institutional financial assistance. Our CAS/DAS students usually live on continued salary payment from their home universities and other funding they have raised nationally or internationally. Besides course and travel fees, candidates need a monthly minimum of CHF 2000 for cost of living plus health insurance.

Registration:     Online Registration Form

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