| Literature DB >> 35979160 |
Chin Kimg Tan1, Danielle Ho1, Lai Mun Wang2, Rahul Kumar1.
Abstract
Drug-induced autoimmune hepatitis (DIAIH) is a specific phenotype of drug-induced liver injury that may lead to the devastating outcome of acute liver failure requiring liver transplantation. Drugs implicated in DIAIH include antimicrobials such as nitrofurantoin and minocycline, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, statins as well as anti-tumor necrosis agents. The clinical features of drug-induced liver injury are indistinguishable from idiopathic autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) as both may have positive AIH-related autoantibodies, elevated immunoglobulin G, as well as similar histopathological findings. In patients who show no clinical improvement, or there is progressive liver injury despite cessation of the suspected drug, a liver biopsy should be considered, whereby the presence of advance fibrosis on histology favors the diagnosis of idiopathic AIH. Empirical treatment with corticosteroids may be required in patients with non-resolving liver injury. A typical clinical scenario supportive of DIAIH includes a history of drug exposure with spontaneous resolution of liver injury after drug withdrawal and the absence of relapse after rapid steroid taper. In this article we report two cases of DIAIH secondary to Sorafenib and Atorvastatin along with a review of currently available literature. Early identification and treatment often lead to a favorable outcome in DIAIH. ©The Author(s) 2022. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Autoimmune hepatitis; Drug-induced autoimmune hepatitis; Drug-induced liver injury; Review
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35979160 PMCID: PMC9260871 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v28.i24.2654
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1007-9327 Impact factor: 5.374
Studies comparing drug-induced autoimmune hepatitis and drug-induced liver injury
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| Stephens | a: Prospective multicentre DILI database, | a: Simplified AIH criteria; b: RUCAM (definite, highly probable, probable and possible) | 26, 2.9% | 843 | Culprit drugs: Statins (31%); antimicrobials (23%) |
| De Boer | a: National prospective DILI database ( | a: Autoimmune (AI) DILI–AI score based on seropositivity for AIH antibodies and raised IgG); b: RUCAM (definite, highly probable and probable) | 47, 3.6% | Two groups: (a) 18 non-AI DILI due to 4 drugs; (b) 67 (reference cohort, DILI due to Augmentin, Isoniazid, Diclofenac) | Similar HLA-DRB1*03:01 (15%) and HLADRB1*04:01 (9%) percentage in patients with DILI compared to population controls from National Marrow Donor Program (12% and 9%, respectively) |
| Hisamochi | a: All DILI who underwent liver biopsy, | a: Revised IAIHG criteria; b: RUCAM and JDD-W scale | 23, NA | 39 | Culprit drugs: CAM (69.6%); NSAIDs (8.7%). IgG reduction in 87%. 50% (8/16) relapsed (4 not treated with steroids, 2 previously received steroids and 2 on tapering dose of steroid dosage). Median time to relapse 283 d (range, 47-1090 d). Rise in IgG with relapse |
| Licata | a: Single centre hospitalized patients with DILI, | a: Simplified AIH score ≥ 6; b: RUCAM (definite, highly probable, probable and possible) | 12, 8.8% | 124 | Culprit drugs: NSAIDs (50%) - (Nimesulide/ketoprofen); Antimicrobials (25%) (Augmentin/Ceftriaxone); CAM (17%). 38.2% of all DILI patients had positive AIH antibodies but only 42.9% with positive antibodies have DIAIH. All DIAIH were treated with corticosteroids and all achieved remission at 15 mo. 58.3% (7/12) had addition of Azathioprine. One patient had a flare while on tapering prednisolone. In 41% (5/12), immunosuppressant was stopped after 2 yr, with no relapse |
DIAIH: Drug-induced autoimmune hepatitis; DILI: Drug-induced liver injury; RUCAM: The Roussel Uclaf Causality Assessment Model; NSAIDs: Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; AIH: Autoimmune hepatitis; IAIHG: International AIH Group; IgG: Immunoglobulin G; CAM: Complementary alternative medicines.
Studies comparing drug-induced autoimmune hepatitis and autoimmune hepatitis
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| Valgeirsson | a: Population based AIH study, | a: Simplified AIH score, if not fulfilled, Revised IAIHG score is used; or received corticosteroids; b: RUCAM score (highly probable, probable and possible) | 13, 18% (9/13 had liver biopsy) | 58 | Culprit drugs: Biologics (77%) - 80% were due to infliximab; Nitrofurantoin (15%) |
| Martínez-Casas | a: Single centre retrospective review of AIH cases, | a: Simplified AIH score; b: RUCAM | 12, 6.3% | 178 | Culprit drugs: Nitrofurantoin (67%); NSAIDs (17%) |
| Wang | a: Single centre retrospective review of AIH and DILI patients; b: 2010-2014; c: NA | a: DILI with positive antibody; simplified AIH score; b: NA (DILI due to drugs/CAM within 6 mo of hospitalization) | 18 (12.4% of all DILI with positive antibody) | 52 | Culprit drugs: CAM, NSAIDs and antibiotics (no breakdown) |
| Yeong | a: Single centre retrospective AIH cases, | a: Revised IAIHG criteria; b: RUCAM (highly probable, probable) | 11, 13.4% | 71 | Culprit drugs: Nitrofurantoin (36.4%); Statins (36.4%); CAM (18%) |
| Weber | a: Single centre cohort of 288 acute liver injury patients who received corticosteroid for DILI/AIH, | a: Simplified AIH score and revised IAIHG criteria; b: RUCAM | 22 | 22 | Culprit drugs: NSAIDs (27.3%); Statins (9%); Direct oral anticoagulants (9%) |
| Björnsson | a: Single centre retrospective review of all AIH cases, | a: Simplified AIH score | 24, 9.2% (24/261) | 237 | Culprit drugs: Minocycline (45.8%); Nitrofurantoin (45.8%) |
DIAIH: Drug-induced autoimmune hepatitis; DILI: Drug-induced liver injury; RUCAM: The Roussel Uclaf Causality Assessment Model; NSAIDs: Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; AIH: Autoimmune hepatitis; IAIHG: International AIH Group; CAM: Complementary alternative medicines.
Figure 1Liver biopsy specimen for patient A. A: Low power view [hematoxylin & eosin (H&E) 100 ×] displays conspicuous portal and lobular inflammation with lobular disarray. Mild steatosis is also noted; B: Higher magnification of the portal tract (H&E 200 ×), zone 1, shows moderate chronic inflammation, lymphoplasmacytic predominantly, and rare eosinophils, with interface damage; C: At similar magnification (H&E 200 ×), the lobule including the perivenular region, e.g., zones 2 and 3, exhibits lobulitis characterized by aggregates of plasma cells, swollen hepatocytes with rosetting, Councilman bodies, and hepatocyte drop-out; D: High power view (H&E 400 ×) demonstrates rosetting of hepatocytes with droplets of orange-brown bile pigment; E and F: Histochemical stains Masson trichrome (E, 40 ×) showing collapse with mild early young fibrosis and Victoria blue (F, 40 ×) revealing paucity of elastic fibers, thus in keeping with subacute injury. Overall, the appearances are supportive of subacute drug-induced liver injury in association with autoimmune hepatitis histological pattern.
Figure 2Bilirubin and alanine transaminase trend for patients A and B. A: Patient A; B: Patient B.
Figure 3Liver biopsy findings for patient B. A: Low power view [hematoxylin & eosin (H&E) 100 ×] shows portal and lobular inflammation with lobular disarray and mild steatosis; B: Higher magnification of the portal tract (H&E 200 ×) demonstrates moderate plasma cell-rich chronic inflammation with continuous interface damage; C: Lobulitis with aggregates of plasma cells and rosetting of hepatocytes is present in the lobule (H&E 200 ×); D and E: Masson trichrome (D, 40 ×) and Victoria blue (E, 40 ×) display mild early young fibrosis and paucity of elastic fibers, respectively. The absence of old mature type fibrosis suggested not a chronic injury. The autoimmune hepatitis histological pattern observed was therefore interpreted to be drug related, atorvastatin-induced.
Comparison between drug-induced autoimmune hepatitis and drug-induced liver injury
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| Demographics | ||
| Female, % | 62%[ | 48% ( |
| Age (yr), mean ± SD | 57± 17[ | 54 ± 18 ( |
| Clinical presentation | ||
| Jaundice, % | 69%[ | 69% ( |
| Rash, % | 4.5%[ | 7.9% ( |
| Hepatocellular injury, % | 92%[ | 57% ( |
| Latency period (d), median (range) | 65 (27-274)[ | 27 (8-64) ( |
| Latency period (d), mean ± SD | 143 ± 188[ | 32 ± 120 ( |
| Culprit drug due to CAM, % | 70%[ | 25% ( |
| Biochemical results | ||
| ALT × ULN, mean ± SD | 28 ± 19[ | 19 ± 22 ( |
| AST × ULN, mean ± SD | 24 ± 17[ | 15 ± 21 ( |
| Autoimmune antibodies and serology | ||
| Detectable ANA, % | 88%[ | 12 ( |
| Detectable ASMA, % | 44%[ | 8.9% ( |
| Detectable AMA, % | 4%[ | 1.9% ( |
| Detectable anti-LKM-1, % | 0%[ | 1.1% ( |
| Elevated IgG, % | 39%[ | 9%[ |
| Serum IgG (g/L), mean ± SD | 19.5 ± 10.7[ | 11.9 ± 4.6 ( |
| Histopathology | ||
| Liver biopsy[ | ||
| Severe portal inflammation, % | 100% | 56.2%-62.5% |
| Prominent portal plasma cells, % | 58.3% | 6.3%-12.5% |
| Rosette formation, % | 66.7% | 6.3%-12.5% |
| Severe focal necrosis, % | 66% | 6.3%-25% |
| Treatment and response to treatment | ||
| Corticosteroid therapy, % | 43%[ | 61% ( |
| Immunosuppressive therapy, (corticosteroid/Azathioprine), % | 58%[ | 9.9% ( |
| Outcomes | ||
| Mild/mod/severe DILI, % | 35%/45%/7.7%[ | 31%/59%/6.2% ( |
| Outcomes (liver transplant/death), % | 3.8%/0%[ | 2.1%/1.5% ( |
| Chronicity rate, % | 17%[ | 21% ( |
Combined comparisons of severity of drug-induced liver injury, mortality, and liver transplantation.
DIAIH: Drug-induced autoimmune hepatitis; DILI: Drug-induced liver injury; ALT: Alanine transaminase; AST: Aspartate transaminase; ULN: Upper limit of normal; CAM: Complementary alternative medicines; Anti-LKM: Anti-liver kidney antibody; SD: Standard deviation; IAIHG: International AIH Group.
Comparison between drug-induced autoimmune hepatitis and autoimmune hepatitis
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| Demographics | ||
| Female, % | 82%[ | 80% ( |
| Clinical presentation | ||
| Acute presentation | > 60%[ | < 20%[ |
| Hypersensitivity reaction (fever, rash, eosinophilia) | Up to 30%[ | Unusual[ |
| Cirrhosis at presentation, % | 0%[ | 34.8% ( |
| Temporal relationship with drugs | Positive | Negative |
| Concurrent AI disease | Unusual[ | Present in 14%-44%[ |
| Biochemical results | ||
| ALT (U/L), mean ± SD | 548 ± 335[ | 227 ± 121 ( |
| AST (U/L), mean ± SD | 460 ± 321[ | 202 ± 57 ( |
| Serology | ||
| IgG, mean ± SD (g/L) | 13.4 g/L[ | 18.6 g/L ( |
| Pre-treatment score | ||
| RUCAM score, median (range) | 6 (3-10)[ | 3.5 (0-7) ( |
| Revised IAIHG score, median (range) | 9.5 (4-14)[ | 13 (9-18)[ |
| Simplified AIH score, median (range) | 4 (2-6)[ | 5 (1-7) ( |
| Histopathology | ||
| F3-F4, % | 33.3%[ | 54.4% ( |
| Typical histology (portal inflammation, interface hepatitis, plasma cells infiltrates) | 18.2%[ | 54%[ |
| Treatment and response to treatment | ||
| Time to biochemical remission, mean (mo) | 2[ | 16.8 ( |
| Treatment with Azathioprine or Mycophenolic acid in addition to corticosteroids, % | 57%[ | 86% ( |
| Biochemical remission, % | 95%[ | 77.3% ( |
| Treatment discontinuation, % | 69%[ | 26% ( |
| Relapse rate, % | 0%[ | 43% ( |
| Time to relapse (wk), median (range) | 131 (37-216)[ | 14 (1-155) ( |
| Outcomes | ||
| Liver transplant/death, % | 0%/0%[ | 2.8%/7% ( |
DIAIH: Drug-induced autoimmune hepatitis; DILI: Drug-induced liver injury; ALT: Alanine transaminase; AST: Aspartate transaminase; RUCAM: The Roussel Uclaf Causality Assessment Model; SD: Standard deviation.