Literature DB >> 12362579

Immune-mediated drug-induced liver disease.

Zhang-Xu Liu1, Neil Kaplowitz.   

Abstract

Drug-induced immune-mediated hepatic injury is an adverse immune response against the liver that results in a disease with hepatitic, cholestatic, or mixed clinical features. Drugs such as halothane, tienilic acid, dihydralazine, and anticonvulsants trigger a hepatitic reaction, and drugs such as chlorpromazine, erythromycins, amoxicillin-calvulanic acid, sulfonamides and sulindac trigger a cholestatic or mixed reaction. Unstable metabolites derived from the metabolism of the drug may bind to cellular proteins or macromolecules, leading to a direct toxic effect on hepatocytes. Protein adducts formed in the metabolism of the drug may be recognized by the immune system as neoantigens. Immunocyte activation may then generate autoantibodies and cell-mediated immune responses, which in turn damage the hepatocytes. Cytochromes 450 are the major oxidative catalysts in drug metabolism, and they can form a neoantigen by covalently binding with the drug metabolite that they produce. Autoantibodies that develop are selectively directed against the particular cytochrome isoenzyme that metabolized the parent drug. The hapten hypothesis proposes that the drug metabolite can act as a hapten and can modify the self of the individual by covalently binding to proteins. The danger hypothesis proposes that the immune system only responds to a foreign antigen if the antigen is associated with a danger signal, such as cell stress or cell death. Most clinically overt adverse hepatic events associated with drugs are unpredictable, and they have intermediate (1 to 8 weeks) or long latency (up to 12 months) periods characteristic of hypersensitivity reactions. Immune-mediated drug-induced liver disease nearly always disappears or becomes quiescent when the drug is removed. Methyldopa, minocycline, and nitrofurantoin can produce a chronic hepatitis resembling AIH if the drug is continued.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12362579     DOI: 10.1016/s1089-3261(02)00025-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Liver Dis        ISSN: 1089-3261            Impact factor:   6.126


  40 in total

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2.  The use of liver biopsy evaluation in discrimination of idiopathic autoimmune hepatitis versus drug-induced liver injury.

Authors:  Ayako Suzuki; Elizabeth M Brunt; David E Kleiner; Rosa Miquel; Thomas C Smyrk; Raul J Andrade; M Isabel Lucena; Agustin Castiella; Keith Lindor; Einar Björnsson
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Review 3.  Drug-induced cholestasis.

Authors:  Manmeet S Padda; Mayra Sanchez; Abbasi J Akhtar; James L Boyer
Journal:  Hepatology       Date:  2011-04       Impact factor: 17.425

4.  Acute exacerbation of autoimmune hepatitis induced by Twinrix.

Authors:  Antal Csepregi; Gerhard Treiber; Christoph Röcken; Peter Malfertheiner
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2005-07-14       Impact factor: 5.742

Review 5.  Transitioning from Idiopathic to Explainable Autoimmune Hepatitis.

Authors:  Albert J Czaja
Journal:  Dig Dis Sci       Date:  2015-05-22       Impact factor: 3.199

Review 6.  Mechanisms of adaptation and progression in idiosyncratic drug induced liver injury, clinical implications.

Authors:  Lily Dara; Zhang-Xu Liu; Neil Kaplowitz
Journal:  Liver Int       Date:  2015-11-11       Impact factor: 5.828

7.  Drug-induced autoimmune liver disease: A diagnostic dilemma of an increasingly reported disease.

Authors:  Agustin Castiella; Eva Zapata; M Isabel Lucena; Raúl J Andrade
Journal:  World J Hepatol       Date:  2014-04-27

Review 8.  Autoimmune Hepatitis in the Elderly: Diagnosis and Pharmacologic Management.

Authors:  Syed Rizvi; Samer Gawrieh
Journal:  Drugs Aging       Date:  2018-07       Impact factor: 3.923

9.  Autoimmune hepatitis triggered by nitrofurantoin: a case series.

Authors:  Sally Appleyard; Ruma Saraswati; David A Gorard
Journal:  J Med Case Rep       Date:  2010-09-23

Review 10.  Primary biliary cirrhosis.

Authors:  Simon Hohenester; Ronald P J Oude-Elferink; Ulrich Beuers
Journal:  Semin Immunopathol       Date:  2009-07-15       Impact factor: 9.623

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