| Literature DB >> 27350943 |
Eric Yoon1, Arooj Babar1, Moaz Choudhary1, Matthew Kutner1, Nikolaos Pyrsopoulos1.
Abstract
Hepatic injury and subsequent hepatic failure due to both intentional and non-intentional overdose of acetaminophen (APAP) has affected patients for decades, and involves the cornerstone metabolic pathways which take place in the microsomes within hepatocytes. APAP hepatotoxicity remains a global issue; in the United States, in particular, it accounts for more than 50% of overdose-related acute liver failure and approximately 20% of the liver transplant cases. The pathophysiology, disease course and management of acute liver failure secondary to APAP toxicity remain to be precisely elucidated, and adverse patient outcomes with increased morbidity and mortality continue to occur. Although APAP hepatotoxicity follows a predictable timeline of hepatic failure, its clinical presentation might vary. N-acetylcysteine (NAC) therapy is considered as the mainstay therapy, but liver transplantation might represent a life-saving procedure for selected patients. Future research focus in this field may benefit from shifting towards obtaining antidotal knowledge at the molecular level, with focus on the underlying molecular signaling pathways.Entities:
Keywords: APAP; Acetaminophen toxicity; Acute liver failure (ALF); Hepatotoxicity; Paracetamol
Year: 2016 PMID: 27350943 PMCID: PMC4913076 DOI: 10.14218/JCTH.2015.00052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Transl Hepatol ISSN: 2225-0719
Fig. 1.Acetaminophen (APAP) metabolic pathway.
Factors influencing APAP-related hepatotoxicity
| Factors | Clinical implications |
| Dose and pattern of use | ↑ APAP toxicity with acute, high doses |
| EtOH | ↓ APAP toxicity with acute EtOH ingestion |
| ↑ APAP toxicity with chronic EtOH ingestion | |
| Herbs and medications | ↑ APAP toxicity with impedance of hepatic glucouronidation |
| Age and genetic factors | ↑ APAP toxicity with advancing age and impaired glucouronidation |
| Nutritional status | ↑ APAP toxicity in malnourished patients |
| Chronic liver disease | ↑ APAP toxicity, especially in chronic EtOH abuse |
Abbreviations: APAP, acetaminophen; EtOH, ethyl alcohol.
Clinical indications for use of NAC
| 1 | Severe APAP toxicity with ALT:AST > 1000 |
| 2 | Initiation of NAC within 24 hours of ingestion |
| 3 | Serum APAP levels from 140 mg/L at 4 hours to 50 mg/L at 10 hours |
| 4 | Acute poisoning (ingested in 1 hour) with no other products containing acetaminophen in the past 24 hours |
| 5 | Acute poisoning with no ingestion of sustained release formulations |
| 6 | Baseline normal ALT, AST and INR |
| 7 | Used ideally within the first 8–10 hours with risk of hepatotoxicity being < 5%, especially if APAP level is above the treatment line on the Rumack-Matthew nomogram |
| 8 | Empirical use when APAP levels cannot be obtained within 8 hours of ingestion |
Abbreviations: APAP, acetaminophen; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; INR, international normalized ratio; NAC, N-acetylcysteine.
Role of NAC
| 1 | Protection against reactive oxygen species by increasing Nrf2 and HO-1 mRNA levels |
| 2 | Protection against mitochondrial dysfunction, which causes release of acylcarnitines in peripheral vasculature |
| 3 | Elimination of JNK activation and GDH release |
| 4 | The mechanism of protection during the early metabolism phase primarily involves improved scavenging of the reactive metabolite NAPQI due to accelerated GSH synthesis |
| 5 | Scavenging of the reactive metabolite NAPQI and decreasing of protein binding during the early phase occurs through increasing levels of GSH |
| 6 | Provision of increased amounts of cysteine to allow regeneration of GSH well beyond clearance of APAP, allowing for hepatocyte regeneration |
Abbreviations: JNK, c-Jun-N-terminal kinase; GD, glutamate dehydrogenase; GSH, glutathione; NAC, N-acetylcysteine; HO-1, heme oxygenase-1; NAPQI, N-acetyl-para-benzo-quinone imine; Nrf2, nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2.