| Literature DB >> 26696029 |
Tanvir Haque1, Eizaburo Sasatomi2, Paul H Hayashi1.
Abstract
Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) remains a significant clinical challenge and is the leading cause of acute liver failure in most countries. An aging population that uses more medications, a constant influx of newly developed drugs and a growing risk from unfamiliar herbal and dietary supplements will make DILI an increasing part of clinical practice. Currently, the most effective strategy for disease management is rapid identification, withholding the inciting agents, supportive care and having a firm understanding of the expected natural history. There are resources available to aid the clinician, including a new online "textbook" as well as causality assessment tools, but a heightened awareness of risk and the disease's varying phenotypes and good history-taking remain cornerstones to diagnosis. Looking ahead, growing registries of cases, pharmacoepidemiology studies and translational research into the mechanisms of injury may produce better diagnostic tools, markers for risk and disease, and prevention and therapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnosis; Drug induced liver injury; Epidemiology; Hepatotoxicity; Herbal and dietary supplements
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26696029 PMCID: PMC4694731 DOI: 10.5009/gnl15114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut Liver ISSN: 1976-2283 Impact factor: 4.519
Crude Annual Incidence of Drug Induced Liver Injury and Mean Prescription Rate in Iceland
| DILI per 100,000 | Mean prescription rate | |
|---|---|---|
| Overall | 19.1 | NA |
| Age, yr | ||
| 15–24 | 8.5 | 0.9 |
| 25–39 | 12.6 | 1.2 |
| 40–59 | 18.8 | 2.4 |
| 60–69 | 32.6 | 4.8 |
| 70–79 | 39.9 | 7.3 |
| 80–106 | 41.0 | 9.3 |
DILI, drug induced liver injury; NA, not available.
Adapted from Björnsson ES, et al. Gastroenterology 2013;144:1419–1425.e3, with permission from Elsevier.7
Common Medications Implicated in Drug Induced Liver Injury with Timing and Pattern of Injury
| Drug | Latency | Pattern of injury |
|---|---|---|
| Antimicrobials | ||
| Isoniazid | 1–6 mo | Hepatocellular, resembling viral hepatitis |
| Rifampin | 0–3 mo | Hepatocellular, sometimes mixed |
| Pyrazinamide | 1–3 mo | Hepatocellular, resembling viral hepatitis |
| Amoxicillin-clavulanate | 1–4 wk | Cholestatic, more hepatocellular in children |
| Sulfonamides | 1–6 wk | Cholestatic, sometimes mixed; immunoallergic |
| Nitrofurantoin, minocycline | 1 wk to months or years | Both an acute and chronic injury form of injury seen. Immunoallergic, autoimmune features |
| Ketoconazole | 0–3 mo | Hepatocellular, sometimes mixed |
| Antiretrovirals | ||
| NRTIs | 1–6 mo | Cholestatic or mixed with lactic acidosis (e.g., stavudine) |
| nNRTIs | 0–3 mo | Initial hepatocellular evolving to cholestatic. Immunoallergic (e.g., nevirapine) |
| Protease inhibitors | 1–3 mo | Hepatocellular, sometimes mixed (ritonavir) |
| Antiepileptics | ||
| Phenytoin | 0–3 mo | Hepatocellular, cholestatic or mixed; immunoallergic |
| Carbamezapine | 1–3 mo | Hepatocellular, cholestatic or mixed; immunoallergic |
| Valproic acid | 1–6 mo | Hepatocellular or mixed, rise in ammonia, sometimes acidosis |
| Analgesics | ||
| NSAIDs | 1–6 mo | Hepatocellular |
| Lipid lowering agents | ||
| Statins | 1–6 mo | Hepatocellular, cholestatic or mixed; autoimmune |
| Immunologics | ||
| TNF antagonists | 1–6 mo | Hepatocellular, autoimmune |
| Herbal and dietary supplements | ||
| Ephedra | 1–3 mo | Hepatocellular, resembling viral hepatitis |
| Green tea extract | 0–6 mo | Hepatocellular |
| Muscle enhancers | 1–6 mo | Cholestatic (anabolic steroids) |
NRTIs, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors; nNRTIs, non-NRTIs; NSAIDs, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; TNF, tumor necrosis factor.
Biopsy Reported Phenotypes of Drug Induced Liver Injury and Agents
| Phenotype | Histologic feature | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Acute hepatic necrosis | Collapse and centrolobular necrosis ( | Acetaminophen, isoniazid |
| Acute fatty liver with lactic acidosis | Microvesicular hepatic steatosis; later with macrovesicular steatosis | Didanosine, valproate |
| Acute viral hepatitis like | Inflammatory infiltrates | Isoniazid, flutamide |
| Autoimmune-like hepatitis | Plasma cell infiltration and interface hepatitis | Minocycline, nitrofurantoin |
| Bland cholestasis | Ballooned hepatocytes with minimal inflammation | Anabolic steroids |
| Cholestatic hepatitis | Ballooned hepatocytes with inflammation | Amoxicillin-clavulanate, phenytoin |
| Cirrhosis | Fibrosis without inflammation | Methotrexate, amiodarone |
| Immunoallergic hepatitis | Eosinophilic infiltration | Phenytoin, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole |
| Nodular regeneration | Microscopic or macroscopic liver nodules without fibrosis | Azathioprine, oxaliplatin |
| Nonalcoholic fatty liver | Micro/macrosteatosis, ballooned hepatocytes, periportal inflammation | Methotrexate, tamoxifen |
| Sinusoidal obstruction syndrome | Obliteration of central veins with inflammation | Busulfan |
| Vanishing bile duct syndrome | Loss of small inter- and intralobular bile ducts ( | Sulfonamides and β-lactams |
Fig. 1A native hepatectomy specimen from a 27-year-old male with vanishing bile duct syndrome due to allopurinol. This patient required liver transplantation 10 months after clinical presentation. A histologic section of the liver demonstrates a paucity of interlobular bile ducts. Two portal tracts shown here are devoid of interlobular bile ducts. Overall, approximately two-thirds of the small portal tracts showed bile duct loss (H&E stain, ×200).
P, portal tract.
Fig. 2A liver biopsy from a 69-year-old male patient with a cholestatic pattern of liver injury following administration of trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. The hepatic lobules showed predominantly centrizonal hepatocanalicular cholestasis and marked swelling of the perivenular hepatocytes. In this case, there was no evidence of ongoing significant biliary epithelial injury in the portal tracts (inset). The antibiotic had been held for several weeks. A biopsy was conducted for persistent jaundice and pruritus. Eventually, the patient had a full recovery (H&E stain, ×200).
C, central vein.
Fig. 3A liver biopsy from a 55-year-old female who developed a submassive hepatocyte necrosis and dropout 2 to 3 months after starting rosuvastatin. This photomicrograph shows large areas of hepatocyte dropout with multiple aggregates of reactive ceroid-laden macrophages (arrows). No viable hepatocytes are present in this picture (H&E stain, ×200).
C, central vein; P, portal tract.