Literature DB >> 22733303

A prospective nationwide study of drug-induced liver injury in Korea.

Ki Tae Suk1, Dong Joon Kim, Chang Hoon Kim, Seung Ha Park, Jai Hoon Yoon, Yeon Soo Kim, Gwang Ho Baik, Jin Bong Kim, Young Oh Kweon, Byung Ik Kim, Seok Hyun Kim, In Hee Kim, Ju Hyun Kim, Soon Woo Nam, Yong Han Paik, Jeong Ill Suh, Joo Hyun Sohn, Byung Min Ahn, Soon Ho Um, Heon Ju Lee, Mong Cho, Myoung Kuk Jang, Sung Kyu Choi, Seong Gyu Hwang, Ho Taik Sung, Jong Young Choi, Kwang Hyub Han.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To address a growing concern about drug-induced liver injury (DILI), a nationwide study was performed to investigate the significance of DILI in Korea.
METHODS: From May 2005 to May 2007, cases of DILI (alanine transferase > 3 × upper normal limit or total bilirubin > 2 × upper normal limit) from 17 referral university hospitals were prospectively enrolled. Adjudication by the seven review boards was considered for the confirmation of causality and the Roussel Uclaf Causality Assessment Method (RUCAM) scale was used.
RESULTS: A total of 371 cases were diagnosed with DILI. The extrapolated incidence of hospitalization at university hospital in Korea was 12/100,000 persons/year. The causes included "herbal medications" (102, 27.5%), "prescription or non-prescription medications" (101, 27.3%), "health foods or dietary supplements" (51, 13.7%), "medicinal herbs or plants" (35, 9.4%), "folk remedies" (32, 8.6%), "combined" (30, 8.2%), "herbal preparations" (12, 3.2%), and others (8, 2.2%). Nine cases were linked to acetaminophen. The frequencies of hepatocellular, mixed, and cholestatic types were 76.3, 14.8, and 8.9%, respectively. A total of 234 cases met the criteria for Hy's law. Five patients died or underwent transplantation. Twenty-five cases (21 herbs and 4 medications) did not meet the time-to-onset criteria of the RUCAM.
CONCLUSIONS: DILI appears to be a highly relevant health problem in Korea. "Herbal medications" are the principal cause of DILI. A more objective and reproducible causality assessment tool is strongly desired as the RUCAM scale frequently undercounts the cases caused by herbs owing to a lack of previous information and incompatible time criteria.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22733303     DOI: 10.1038/ajg.2012.138

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Gastroenterol        ISSN: 0002-9270            Impact factor:   10.864


  59 in total

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Review 5.  Epidemiology and Genetic Risk Factors of Drug Hepatotoxicity.

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7.  Ashwagandha-induced liver injury: A case series from Iceland and the US Drug-Induced Liver Injury Network.

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8.  Herbal medicine-related hepatotoxicity.

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