| Literature DB >> 34149320 |
Anna Licata1, Maria Giovanna Minissale1, Marco Distefano2, Giuseppe Montalto1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) is responsible for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), which in males, especially in advanced age, can sometimes evolve into acute respiratory distress syndrome. In addition, mild to moderate alterations in liver function tests (LFTs) have been reported in the worst affected patients. Our review aims to analyse data on the incidence and prognostic value of LFT alterations, the underlying mechanisms and the management of pre-existing liver disease in COVID-19 affected patients.Entities:
Keywords: COVID‐19; Liver Function tests (LTFs); SARS‐CoV‐2; liver injury
Year: 2021 PMID: 34149320 PMCID: PMC8207035 DOI: 10.1002/ygh2.455
Source DB: PubMed Journal: GastroHep ISSN: 1478-1239
Description of studies assessing liver damage in COVID‐19
| Author | Country | Date of study publication, | No of patients | AST/ALT alteration | Overall mortality | Pre‐existing liver disease | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Fan et al | China |
February 2020 retrospective, single‐center study | 148 |
37.2% had abnormal liver function at hospital admission A significantly higher proportion of patients with abnormal liver function (57.8%) had received lopinavir/ritonavir after admission compared to patients with normal liver function (31.3%) | N/A | N/A |
| 2 | Liu et al | China |
February 2020 Multicenter study | 32 |
6.2% had abnormal AST 28% had abnormal ALT | N/A | N/A |
| 3 | Chen et al | China |
February 2020 Retrospective, single‐center study | 99 |
35% had increased AST 28% had increased ALT | 11% |
No liver comorbidities described Digestive system disease 11% |
| 4 | Cai et al | China |
February 2020 Cross‐sectional study | 417 |
76.3% had abnormal liver tests 21.5% had liver injury during hospitalization | N/A | 1%‐5% NAFLD, alcoholic liver disease, and chronic hepatitis B |
| 5 | Xu et al | China |
February 2020 Retrospective case series | 62 | 16% had increased AST (>40 U/I) | 0% | 11% of liver disease |
| 6 | Huang et al | China |
February 2020 Prospective study | 41 | 37% had increased AST (>40 U/I) | 15% | 2% of liver disease |
| 7 | Zhang et al | China |
March 2020 Group‐control study | 115 |
‐ AST elevated in 14.7% (mean value 32.14 ± 15.74) ‐ ALT elevated un 9,5% (mean values 41 ± 24.9)
‐ ALT (21.22 ± 12.7 vs 37.8 ± 32.17 ‐ AST (24.39 ± 9.79vs 38.87 ± 22.55 | 0.87% | 2 patients with HBV were excluded |
| 8 | Cao et al | China |
March 2020 Randomized, controlled, open‐label trial | 199 |
‐ AST elevation in patients overall (20.5%), treated with lopinavir/ritonavir (18.8%), treated with standard care (22%) ‐ ALT elevation in patients overall (41%), treated with lopinavir/ritonavir (36.5%), treated with standard care (45.5%), | Day 28 mortality 22% |
No liver comorbidities described Diabetes (11%) |
| 9 | Guan et al | China |
April 2020 Retrospective study | 1099 |
AST – ALT increased (> 40 U/L): 18%‐19% if mild COVID disease 39%‐28% if severe disease | 1.4% | 2.1% Hepatitis B infection |
| 10 | Shi et al | China |
April 2020 Descriptive study | 81 |
53% had increased AST (> 40 U/I) | 5% | 9% of liver disease, hepatitis, or cirrhosis |
| 11 | Yang et al | China |
May 2020 Single‐center, retrospective, observational study | 52 |
29% had increased transaminases, with no difference between survivors and non‐survivors | 61% |
No liver comorbidities described |
| 12 | Cavalcanti et al | Brazil |
July 2020 Multicenter, randomized, open‐label, controlled trial | 665 |
Transaminase elevation In patients overall (7.7%) and pts. treated with ‐ Hydroxychloroquine +azithromycin (10.9%), ‐ Hydroxychloroquine (8.5%), ‐ Azithromycin (4%), ‐ Neither Hydroxychloroquine nor azithromycin (3.4%), | 0.8% |
No liver comorbidities described Diabetes (19%), Obesity (15%) |
FIGURE 1Pathogenetic mechanism of SARS‐CoV 2 infection and multi‐organ involvement cytokine storm
Type of DILI and mechanism of damage of different approved drugs used for therapy of COVID‐19, adapted from Liver Tox
| Drugs | Type of DILI | Mechanism of liver injury |
|---|---|---|
| Chloroquine | Hepatocellular | Hypersensitivity, idiosyncratic |
| Azithromycin |
Cholestatic hepatitis (more frequent) Hepatocellular | Hypersensitivity, idiosyncratic |
| Acetaminophen | Hepatocellular | Dose‐dependent |
| Lopinavir/ritonavir | Hepatocellular, cholestatic or mixed | Due to liver metabolism by the cytochrome P450 system (CYP3A4), which may result in the production of a toxic intermediate |
| Tocilizumab | Hepatocellular, predominantly cholestatic | Linked to effects on the immune system or on the IL‐6 pathway, which is important in liver regeneration |
| Remdesivir | Hepatocellular | Idiosyncratic |