| Literature DB >> 32665926 |
Ammar Al-Rifaie1, Mir Azam Khan1, Amjad Ali1, Asha Kumari Dube1, Dermot Gleeson1, Barbara Hoeroldt1.
Abstract
Lisinopril is an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor (ACE-I) that has been on market for more than 25 years. ACE-I are usually well tolerated and rarely have serious or life-threatening side effects. We describe an unusual presentation of fulminant hepatic cholestasis probably secondary to lisinopril. To our knowledge, this is the second case report which shows lisinopril-induced liver injury though a cholestatic mechanism. The patient was a 59-year-old woman with type 2 diabetes, a high body mass index and hypertension, who presented with a 5-week history of jaundice and itching. She had been started on lisinopril for diabetic nephropathy 8 weeks before admission. Other causes for cholestasis had been excluded through non-invasive immunology and virology screening, an ultrasound of the liver, magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography and a liver biopsy. The biopsy was consistent with drug-induced liver injury. Lisinopril was stopped 2 weeks before admission. The patient's hospital stay was complicated by contrast nephropathy and influenza A which were both treated appropriately. Unfortunately, the liver cholestasis did not completely resolve following withdrawal of lisinopril and the patient died after 4 months. A literature search yielded only six other reported cases of lisinopril-induced liver injury. Five cases described hepatocellular damage and one showed cholestatic injury. LEARNING POINTS: Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors (ACE-I) rarely have serious or life-threatening side effects.Lisinopril-induced liver injury can present as hepatocellular or cholestatic injury.Severe hepatotoxicity secondary to lisinopril can be life threatening irrespective of the liver injury pattern. © EFIM 2020.Entities:
Keywords: Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors; cholestasis; drug-induced liver injury; lisinopril
Year: 2020 PMID: 32665926 PMCID: PMC7350971 DOI: 10.12890/2020_001600
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Case Rep Intern Med ISSN: 2284-2594
Figure 1Portal fibrosis and bridging fibrosis (Orcein stain). Black arrowheads indicate original portal areas, while clear arrows indicate new elastic fibres
Figure 2Cholestatic hepatitis (H&E stain). Canalicular cholestasis is indicated by arrows (yellow-green pigment)
Summary of the presented case and previously published cases of lisinopril-induced liver injury
| Country, (year) | Age | Sex | Time to, symptoms | Symptoms | Consequences | Pattern of liver, damage | Liver biopsy | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| France (1990) | 66 | M | 2 weeks | Jaundice, fever, myalgia | Hepatic encephalopathy,ascites, perforated DU, bacterial peritonitis and death | Hepatocellular | Centrilobular necrosis, cholestasis, polymorphic and monocytic inflammatory infiltrate | Larrey et al. [ |
| USA (1993) | Unknown | M | Unknown | Unknown | Survived, LFT normalised | Hepatocellular | Toxic injury without cholestasis | Hilburn et al. [ |
| UK (1995) | 64 | F | 12 days | Jaundice | Aplastic anaemia, sepsis, died | Hepatocellular | Bone marrow aplasia with changes indicating hepatorenal failure on post-mortem examination | Harrison et al. [ |
| Netherlands (1995) | 56 | M | 4 months | Jaundice, fatigue, pruritus | Chronic liver disease | Hepatocellular | Fibrosed portal tract with markedly prominent ductular proliferation. Plasma cells and granulocytes infiltration. Intrahepatic cholestasis | Droste et al. [ |
| USA (2010) | 30 | F | 8 months | Fatigue and jaundice | Survived, LFT normalised | Hepatocellular | Interface hepatitis, lymphocytic portal infiltration | Zalawadiya et al. [ |
| Jamaica (2014) | 47 | F | 2 years | Weakness, jaundice, loss of appetite | Survived, LFT normalised | Cholestatic | Portal fibrosis and inflammation, cholestasis, lymphocytic cell infiltration | Singh et al. [ |
| UK (2017) | 59 | F | 8 weeks | Jaundice | LFT did not resolve, died | Cholestatic | Acute cholestasis with canalicular bile plugs; with focal portal-to-portal bridging fibrosis and centrilobular steatosis | Our case |
| Median | 57 | 12 weeks |
DU, duodenal ulcer; LFT, liver function test.