| Literature DB >> 28091407 |
Li-Xia Yang1, Cheng-Yuan Liu2, Lun-Li Zhang1, Ling-Ling Lai1, Ming Fang2, Chong Zhang3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Drug is an important cause of liver injury and accounts for up to 40% of instances of fulminant hepatic failure. Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is increasing while the diagnosis becomes more difficult. Though many drugs may cause DILI, Chinese herbal medicines have recently emerged as a major cause due to their extensive use in China. We aimed to provide drug safety information to patients and health carers by analyzing the clinical and pathological characteristics of the DILI and the associated drug types.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28091407 PMCID: PMC5282672 DOI: 10.4103/0366-6999.197995
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chin Med J (Engl) ISSN: 0366-6999 Impact factor: 2.628
Clinical characteristics of 287 patients with drug-induced liver injury
| Characteristics | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | |||
| Male | 156 (54.36) | 2.17 | >0.05 |
| Female | 131 (45.64) | ||
| Age (years) | |||
| <20 | 5 (1.74) | 16.20 | <0.05 |
| 21–40 | 99 (34.49) | ||
| 41–60 | 133 (46.34) | ||
| >60 | 50 (17.42) | ||
| Underlying diseases | |||
| Yes | 179 (62.37) | 16.55 | <0.05 |
| No | 108 (37.63) | ||
| Combined hepatopathy | |||
| Yes | 166 (57.84) | 6.89 | <0.05 |
| No | 121 (42.16) |
Age, whether the patients have underlying disease or hepatopathy is related to severe drug-induced liver injury, P<0.05.
Therapeutic categories of causative drugs in the 287 patients with drug-induced liver injury
| Drug category | |
|---|---|
| Chinese herbal medicine | 105 (36.59) |
| Osteopathy, arthropathy | 24 (8.36) |
| Dermatosis | 18 (6.27) |
| Gastropathy | 13 (4.53) |
| Leukotrichia, alopecia | 11 (3.83) |
| Gynecologic disease | 11 (3.83) |
| Nephrosis, prostate disease | 9 (3.14) |
| Regulate sleep, improve physique | 5 (1.74) |
| Constipation | 3 (1.05) |
| Others | 11 (3.83) |
| Western medicine | 163 (56.79) |
| Antituberculosis drug | 53 (18.47) |
| Antibiotics | 18 (6.27) |
| Antithyroid drug | 18 (6.27) |
| Analgesic–antipyretic drug | 15 (5.23) |
| Psychiatric drug | 13 (4.53) |
| Antineoplastic drug | 10 (3.48) |
| Hypoglycemic drug | 10 (3.48) |
| Cardiovascular disease drug | 6 (2.09) |
| Healthcare product | 5 (1.74) |
| Immunosuppressive agent | 5 (1.74) |
| Antifungal agent | 4 (1.39) |
| Hair dyes | 4 (1.39) |
| Hypolipidemic | 2 (0.70) |
| Others | 19 (6.62) |
Pathological characteristics of 46 patients with drug-induced liver injury, n (%)
| Drug category | Hepatitis | Intrahepatic cholestasis | Mixed | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chinese herbal medicine | 27 | 18 (66.67) | 6 (22.22) | 3 (11.11) |
| Western medicine | 19 | 11 (57.89) | 7 (36.84) | 1 (5.26) |
| Total | 46 | 29 (63.04) | 13 (28.26) | 4 (8.70) |
Figure 1Typical pathological manifestation observed in this study. (a) Hepatitis: focal or massive hepatocyte necrosis, collapsed mesh stent, and inflammatory cell (lymphocyte, eosinophil, and neutrophil) infiltration in portal area and lobule; (b) mixed: cholestasis in hepatocytes, bile capillaries and stellate cells, and focal hepatocyte necrosis with ballooning degeneration; (c) cholestasis: cholestasis in liver centrilobular area, bile plug formation in bile capillaries, accumulation of bilirubin pigment in hepatocytes and stellate cells, and no significant inflammatory cell infiltration, (H and E, original magnification, ×40).