Interpreting LFTs – Practical Ward Guide for Junior Doctors

Abnormal LFTs are extremely common in hospital.

Most are:

  • mild
  • incidental
  • non-urgent

But occasionally they signal:

  • obstruction
  • acute hepatitis
  • decompensated cirrhosis
  • liver failure

Your job is to:

Recognise the pattern
Decide if it’s dangerous
Act appropriately

Not memorise long lists of causes.


✅ First principle

Never read LFTs number by number.

Always ask:

What pattern is this?

Because management depends on the pattern, not the exact value.

There are only three patterns you need to recognise.


✅ Step 1 – Know what each test actually represents

Before interpreting, understand what they mean clinically.


ALT / AST → hepatocellular injury

Leak out when liver cells are damaged.

Think:
👉 inflammation or cell injury

Examples:

  • hepatitis
  • alcohol
  • fatty liver
  • drugs

ALP (± GGT) → cholestasis / obstruction

Raised when bile flow is blocked.

Think:
👉 bile duct problem

Examples:

  • gallstones
  • cholangitis
  • PSC/PBC
  • tumour

Bilirubin → excretion problem

Raised when:

  • obstruction
  • liver dysfunction
  • haemolysis

Think:
👉 jaundice severity


Albumin & INR → liver function (most important)

Reflect how well the liver is working.

Think:
👉 severity, not diagnosis

If abnormal → patient may be sick.


✅ Step 2 – Identify the pattern

This is the key step.


🟡 Hepatocellular pattern (ALT predominant)

Labs:

ALT/AST ↑↑
ALP normal or mild

Think:

Liver inflammation/injury

Common real-life causes:

  • MASLD
  • alcohol
  • viral hepatitis
  • drugs (antibiotics, statins, paracetamol)
  • autoimmune hepatitis
  • ischaemic hepatitis

What to do:

👉 blood tests + history
(not urgent imaging usually)


🟢 Cholestatic pattern (ALP predominant)

Labs:

ALP ↑↑
ALT mild

Think:

Bile duct obstruction

Common causes:

  • gallstones
  • cholangitis
  • malignancy
  • PSC/PBC
  • drug cholestasis

What to do:

👉 ultrasound first

Imaging is more important than blood tests here.


🔴 Synthetic dysfunction pattern

Labs:

Low albumin
High INR
± bilirubin

Think:

Liver failing

Causes:

  • cirrhosis
  • acute liver failure
  • severe hepatitis
  • sepsis

What to do:

👉 escalate early

This is the dangerous group.


✅ Step 3 – Add the clinical story

LFTs never interpreted in isolation.

Always combine with:

  • symptoms
  • observations
  • alcohol history
  • medications
  • metabolic risk
  • infection risk

Pattern + history = diagnosis


✅ Practical ward examples (how to think fast)


Scenario 1

ALT 550, ALP 120
→ hepatocellular
→ think hepatitis/drug/alcohol


Scenario 2

ALP 600, jaundice, fever
→ cholestatic
→ think cholangitis
→ urgent imaging + antibiotics


Scenario 3

AST > ALT (2:1), alcohol history
→ alcohol-related


Scenario 4

Low albumin, INR 2.0, ascites
→ decompensated cirrhosis
→ escalate


Scenario 5

Mild ALT 70 in obese diabetic
→ likely MASLD
→ outpatient management


✅ Red flags you must not miss

Escalate urgently if:

  • confusion / encephalopathy
  • INR rising
  • jaundice + sepsis
  • hypotension
  • severe pain
  • very high ALT (>1000)
  • known cirrhosis deteriorating

These are not routine LFT abnormalities.


❌ Common junior mistakes

  • Reading numbers individually
  • Over-investigating mild ALT rises
  • Missing synthetic failure
  • Forgetting medication history
  • Not imaging cholestasis
  • Referring everyone to gastro

Most abnormal LFTs are benign.

A few are dangerous.

Learn to tell the difference.


✅ Simple ward algorithm

When you see abnormal LFTs:

  1. Is the patient sick?
  2. ALT or ALP predominant?
  3. Any synthetic dysfunction?
  4. Blood tests or imaging?
  5. Urgent or routine referral?

That’s it.


✅ Take-home concept

ALT = inflammation
ALP = obstruction
INR/albumin = severity

If you recognise those three ideas, you can interpret 90% of LFTs safely.