| Literature DB >> 29615102 |
Dimas Yusuf1, Joanna Christy2, David Owen3, Meghan Ho1, David Li4, Martin J Fishman1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nifedipine is a generic, well-known and commonly-prescribed dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker used in the treatment of hypertension and Prinzmetal's angina. A known but very rare and serious adverse effect of nifedipine is clinically-apparent hepatitis which can take months to resolve. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Adverse events; Calcium channel blocker; DILI; Drug-induced hepatitis; Drug-induced liver injury; Hepatocellular; Jaundice; Liver biopsy; Nifedipine; Side effect
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29615102 PMCID: PMC5883361 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-018-3322-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Medications commonly implicated in drug-induced liver injuries
| Type | Drug class | Common medications |
|---|---|---|
| Dose-dependent | Aniline analgesic | |
| Inhaled anesthetics | Halothane | |
| Idiosyncratic | Antibiotics and other antimicrobials | |
| Non-steroidal anti-inflammatories (NSAIDs) | Diclofenac, naproxen, acetylsalicylic acid [ | |
| Antiarrhythmics | ||
| Statins and other lipid-lowering agents | ||
| Antihypertensives | ||
| Antiepileptics, anticonvulsants, anxiolytics | ||
| Anti-diabetic agents | Rosiglitazone, troglitazone [ | |
| Antipsychotics and antidepressants | Chlorpromazine [ | |
| Immunosuppressants | Glucocorticoids, methotrexate, azathioprine, cyclophosphamide, mercaptopurine | |
| Chemotherapeutic agents | Cisplatin, oxaliplatin, 5-fluorouracil, floxuridine, tamoxifen | |
| Other notable agents |
These medications are commonly associated with drug-induced liver injuries. Acetaminophen, amoxicillin-clavulanate, amiodarone, atorvastatin, and captopril account for the vast majority of cases. In particular, acetaminophen, isoniazid, propylthiouracil, phenytoin, valproate, and fluoroquinolones account for the vast majority of drug-induced fulminant liver failures [4, 5]
Fig. 1Findings on imaging. Computed tomography (CT) of the patient’s abdomen (A—abdominal view, and B—liver view) revealed a prominent Riedel lobe of the liver, with no evidence of obstruction, thrombosis, or malignancy. Mild changes of sigmoid diverticulosis were seen, with no evidence of acute diverticulitis. A repeat CT revealed mild ascites localized to the right upper quadrant, and the liver edge appeared to have a slightly nodular contour, a non-specific finding in this particular case, but which in general may suggest cirrhosis. Abdominal ultrasound (C, D) revealed a heterogeneous echotexture of the liver with regions of increased echogenicity in the right lobe, a non-specific finding which may be seen in hepatitis
Fig. 2Findings on liver core biopsy. Ultrasound-guided core needle biopsy of the liver demonstrated that the overall hepatic architecture was preserved. Abnormal features included the marked expansion and fibrosis of portal tracts. In A fibrous tongues can be seen extending outwards into the liver parenchyma. The centrilobular areas appear preserved. There is pericentral sinusoidal congestion. Within the portal tracts (B) there are heavy infiltration of acute and chronic inflammatory cells, mostly lymphocytes and neutrophils. This extends into the limiting plate and extensively involves the adjacent liver parenchyma. Many damaged bile ductules and necrotic hepatocytes can be seen in C, and isolated necrotic hepatocytes can also be seen in the liver parenchyma in D. These biopsy findings are consistent with severe subacute hepatitis with developing portal fibrosis. The presence of plasma cells within the inflammatory infiltrate suggests the likelihood of an immune mechanism (hypersensitivity) as a component of the damage. However, the overall pattern of liver damage is unlike typical autoimmune hepatitis. In the absence of anti-smooth muscle antibodies, the possibility of drug-induced hepatitis via a hypersensitivity or immune mechanism is favoured. In particular, bile ductular damage—which is commonly seen in drug-induced hepatitis—may in turn produce hypersensitivity-related liver damage
Characteristics of nifedipine-induced liver injury from prior case reports
| Case report | Rotmensch et al. [ | Davidson [ | Shaw et al. [ | Babany et al. [ | Basile et al. [ | This case |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient | 69-year-old male treated for stable angina | 59-year-old male treated for mild angina | 80-year-old female treated for crescendo angina | 78-year-old female treated for arterial hypertension | 76-year-old male with end stage renal disease | 78-year-old female treated for hypertension |
| Nifedipine dose | 40 mg PO daily | – | 60 mg PO daily divided into 3 doses | 20 mg PO daily | 60 mg PO daily (extended release) | 10 mg PO daily |
| Course of illness | ||||||
| Onset of symptoms after initial dose | 10 days, 12 h (re-exposure) | 14 days | 2–5 days | 1 month | 3.25 years | 10 days |
| Peak after initial dose | – | – | 5 days | – | 3.5 years | 14 days |
| Peak after onset of symptoms | – | – | 1–3 days | – | 90 days | 4 days |
| Resolution of clinical or biochemical signs of disease following cessation | Up to 10 months | Up to 6 months | Up to 2 months | Up to 2 weeks | Up to 3 months | Up to 5 weeks |
| Presenting symptoms | ||||||
| Unwell or fatigued | – | Yes | – | – | – | Yes |
| Jaundice | Yes | Yes | – | – | Yes | Yes |
| Nausea | Yes | – | Yes | – | – | Yes |
| Anorexia | Yes | – | Yes | – | – | Yes |
| Chills, rigor | Yes | Yes | – | – | – | Yes |
| Fever | Yes (38.8 °C) | – | No | – | – | No |
| Diaphoresis | – | Yes | – | – | – | No |
| Abdominal pain | – | – | Yes, RUQ | – | – | Yes |
| Ascites or hepatomegaly | No | – | – | – | – | No |
| Biomarkers at peak | ||||||
| Bilirubin, conjugated | 8.6× ULN | – | – | – | 9.8× ULN | 23.8× ULN |
| Bilirubin, total | – | – | 1.5× ULN | – | 4.8× ULN | 7.4× ULN |
| AST (SGOT) | 1.12× ULN | – | 21.3× ULN | “Normal” | 2.9× ULN | 41.9× ULN |
| ALT (SGPT) | 1.2× ULN | 0.9× ULN | – | “Normal” | 1.4× ULN | 29.4× ULN |
| ALP | 420 U/dL | 20 KA units | 3.2× ULN | 1.5× ULN | 3.8× ULN | 2.7× ULN |
| GGT | – | 31.8× ULN | 24.5× ULN | 5.3× ULN | 14.0× ULN | 6.4× ULN |
| LDH | – | – | 5.2× ULN | – | – | 1.7× ULN |
| Immunology and hematology | ||||||
| Eosinophilia | – | – | Yes | – | – | No |
| IgG | 22.2 g/L (elevated) | – | – | – | – | 12.0 g/L (normal) (ref ≤ 15.2 g/L) |
| ANA pattern | – | – | – | Negative | – | 1:80 (positive) Homogeneous, chromosome +ve |
| ASMA | Negative | – | – | Negative | – | Negative |
| AMA | Negative | – | – | Negative | – | Negative |
| Anti-LKM1 | – | – | – | – | Negative | 1.2 EU (negative) (ref ≤ 20 EU) |
| Complement | Normal | – | – | – | – | – |
| Imaging | ||||||
| Abdominal US | – | – | Normal | – | Normal | Normal |
| Abdominal CT | – | – | – | – | – | Hepatitis |
| Liver biopsy | – | “Subacute hepatitis on background of alcoholic liver disease” | “The portal tracts were expanded with a mixed inflammatory cell infiltrate rich in eosinophils” | “Alcoholic-like liver injury, consisting of steatosis and Mallory bodies” | – | “Portal tract and central zone inflammation and necrosis with plasma cell infiltrates” |
This table summarizes the findings of prior case reports of nifedipine-induced hepatitis in the literature. Jaundice, nausea, anorexia, chills, rigors, and abdominal pain appear to be the most common presenting symptoms. Biochemically, there is a pattern of general transaminitis with marked elevations in AST, GGT, and conjugated bilirubin
Common causes of severe liver injury
| Category | Common examples | Additional investigations |
|---|---|---|
| Drug-induced hepatitis | Dose-dependent | Medication history, rule out other possible causes, CBC, liver biopsy |
| Viral hepatitis | Hepatitis A, B, C, D, and E | Drug and travel history, hepatitis A IgM, hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg), anti-HBc, anti-HBs, anti-HCV, anti-HBc-IgM, HBeAg, monotest, EBV serology, EBV DNA by PCR, CMV serology, CMV DNA by PCR, HIV antibody |
| Alcoholic hepatitis | Ethanol ingestion | Serum ethanol level, AST to ALT ratio (2:1 or greater may suggest ethanol injury) |
| Toxic hepatitis | Vinyl chloride | Diet history, vinyl chloride breath test or urine test for thiodiglycolic acid |
| Autoimmune hepatitis | Overlap autoimmune hepatitis | In general, consider: total IgG, gamma-globulin level, anti-soluble liver antigen or liver pancreas (anti-SLA/LP) antibody, liver biopsy |
| Ischemic hepatitis | Budd-Chiari syndrome | CBC, lactate, hypercoagulopathy workup, age-appropriate malignancy workup, abdominal ultrasound, CT, or MRI |
The above are causes of liver injury that can result in liver enzyme elevations that exceed 1000 U/L, or 25 times the upper limit of normal