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Hepatotoxicity of Antituberculosis Therapy Department of Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine R3 Yang BH An Official ATS Statement Introduction Methods The Liver: Structure and Function Drug-induced Liver Injury: General Concepts DILI during Treatment of Latent TB Infection Hepatotoxicity during Treatment of TB Disease Recommendations regarding TB DILI Program Infrastructure Provider Education and Resources Pretreatment Clinical Evaluation Patient Education Medication Administration and Pharmacy Treatment of LTBI Treatment of TB Disease Conclusions Introduction Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) Liver : Drug metabolism & Detoxification From hepatic adaptation to hepatocellular injury Incomplete knowledge Metabolism of anti-TB medication Mechanism of TB DILI Available data regarding the incidence & severity of TB DILI → prevention & management recommendation Priorities for future study to develop safer treatments for LTBI and TB disease Methods Multidisciplinary symposium on Nov. 13-14, 2002 Specialist in TB Pharmacology Hepatology PubMed searches TB Treatment Hepatitis Liver injury Hepatotoxicity Adverse events Latent Infection THE LIVER: STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION Between the alimentary tract and the systemic circulation → to maximize processing of absorbed nutrients → to minimize exposure to toxins, foreign chemicals Hepatic drug metabolism: transporters, enzymes, excretion “First pass phenomenon” Phase 1 pathway : oxidation, reduction, hydrolysis by cytochrome P450 class of enzyme Phase 2 pathway : glucuronidation, sulation, acetylation, glutathione conjugation Phase 3 pathway : excretion into bile or the systemic circulation by celluar transporter protein DILI : General concepts Definition : clinical diagnosis of exclusion Histologic specimen Other causes such as acute viral hepatitis Rechallenge Dimension of the problem 7 % of reported drug adverse effects 2 % of jaundice in hospitals 30 % of fulminant liver failure > 700 drugs with hepatotoxicity in United States Pathogenesis Direct toxicity of the primary compound, a metabolite Immunological mediated response Hepatic enzyme measurement ALT is more specific. AST also signify abnormality in m., heart, or kidney. Normal range within 2 SD from healthy populations Variation as much as 45 % on a single day Elevation after exercise, hemolysis, muscle injury Higher conc. in men and those with greater BMI Lower conc. in children and older adults Types of DILI Hepatic adaptation : survival gene→injury→hepatocyte proliferation Drug-induced acute hepatitis or hepatocellular injury : phenytoin, MTX Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease : obesity, ethanol, HAART Granulomatous hepatitis : allopurinol, quinidine, sulfonamides, RZ Cholestasis Chemical cofactor : ethanol, calcium channel blocker Preexisting liver disease : HIV, HCV DILI DURING TREATMENT OF LTBI Isoniazid (I) Metabolism mostly in liver Mechanism of injury : reactive metabolites of MAH Histopathology Acetyl-isoniazid by NAT-2 → mono-acetyl hydrazine (MAH) & di-acetyl hydrazine Acetylator status : fast or slow acetylator Non-specific changes resemble those of viral hepatitis with nonzonal necrosis. Drug interaction : phenytoin, carbamazepine↑by Inhibition of cytochrome P450 2E and 2C Hepatic adaptation : up to 20 % Overall rate of hepatotoxicity 1~4 % Timing : within weeks to months Isoniazid (II) Age : age associated, more severe, highter mortality Racial difference : Asian male (double risk) > white male Sex : no sex-related difference Death : women, cirrhosis, older than 35 years Cofactors Pregnant women in the 3rd trimester and in the 1st 3 months of the postpartum period Alcohol Concomitant administration of other hepatotoxic drugs ; acetaminophen, methotrexate, sulfasalazine HIV : same range Hepatitis B and C, elevated baseline transaminases, rifampin, malnutrition, prior INH related hepatotoxicity, continued use of INH while symptomatic as a risk factor Rifampin Mechanism of hepatotoxicity Conjugated hyperbilirubinemia by inhibiting the major bile salt exporter pump Rare injury byHypersensitivity reaction Drug interaction : induction of cytochromes warfarin, prednisone, digitoxin, quinidine, ketoconazole, itraconazole, propranolol, clofibrate, sulfonylureas, phenytoin, HIV protease inhibitors, and HIV nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors Isoniazid and rifampin Intermittent isoniazid & rifampin = daily isoniazid in a canadian study 2.25 % in a meta analysis , a higher incidence than in regimens containing one or the other drug Pyrazinamide Metabolism Mechanism of injury T1/2 :10 hrs → 15 hrs in preexisting hepatic disease Pyrazinamide is de-aminated to pyrazinic acid →5-hydroxy pyrazinic acid by xanthine oxidase, aldehyde oxydase, xanthine dehydrogenase Clearance by kidney Dose-dependent hepatotoxicity Idiosyncratic hepatotoxicity Drug interaction : allopurinol Fluoroquinolones Ciprofloxacin, Moxifloxacin ↔ Levofloxacin, Gatifloxacin Reversible transaminase elevation : 2~3 % 0.9 % reported MFXN related liver injury: >1.5 times ULN LFXN : rate of the severe hepatotoxicity < 1 per 1,000,000 Mechanism : hypersensitivity reaction, eosinophilia DILI DURING TREATMENT OF TB DISEASE Age over 35 TB DILI rate as age increased 2 → 8 % 22 ~ 33 % in >35 years V.S. 8 ~ 17 % in < 35 years Children < 5 years Sex : women Cofactors : alcohol use Abnormal baseline transaminase Acetylator status : slow acetylator Other factors : malnutrition, hypoalbuminemia, HLA-DQB1 Regimen : rifampin HIV-infected individuals : slight overall influence Hepatitis B : Increased severity in hepatitis B carrier Hepatitis C : independent risk factor DILI with second-line Anti-TB agents 2 % in ethionamide, prothionamide 0.3 % in para-aminosalicylic acid RECOMMENDATIONS REGARDING TB DILI Program Infrastructure Clear and recurring communications with patients in the preferred language Accurate medical evaluation, treatment, and monitoring Convenient access to care and rapid responses to suspected drug adverse events Provider Education and Resources TB DILI policies and procedures should be included in clinic manuals and in staff training. Other health providers should be made aware of TB diagnosis and treatment, as allowed. Providers without TB treatment experience or infrastructure should consider referral to a specialized clinic. Pretreatment Clinical Evaluation A standardized history form is recommended, which includes risk factors for hepatotoxicity. The physical examination should include evaluation for signs of liver disease, such as liver tenderness, hepatosplenomegaly, jaundice, caput medusa, spider angiomata, ascites, and edema. Previous laboratory values should be reviewed when available. Screening for viral hepatitis should be considered for individuals who inject drugs; were born in endemic areas of Asia, Africa, the Pacific Islands, Eastern Europe, or the Amazon Basin; are HIV infected; may have had sexual or household contact with chronically infected individuals; may have had occupational exposure to infected blood; are chronic hemodialysis patients; are recipients of clotting factors before 1987; have undiagnosed liver disease; or arerecipients of blood or solid organ transplants before 1992. Infants born to infected mothers should also be considered for screening. Voluntary HIV counseling and testing are recommended for all patients with TB disease. Patient Education Printed instructions should include clinic telephone numbers, include explicit instructions for after-hours care, and utilize patient’s preferred language at a readable level. Patients should be categorically told to immediately stop medications for nausea, vomiting, abdominal discomfort, or unexplained fatigue and to contact the clinic for further evaluation. Patients should attend clinic follow-up visits for monitoring and reinforcement of education. Patients should be warned about concomitant alcohol and hepatotoxic over-the-counter, and alternative and prescription medication use. Patients should inform their health care providers of anti-TB medications prescribed. Treatment of Tb disease Rechallenge After ALT returns to less than two times the ULN, rifampin may be restarted with or without ethambutol. After 3 to 7 days, isoniazid may be reintroduced, subsequently rechecking ALT. If symptoms recur or ALT increases, the last drug added should be stopped. For those who have experienced prolonged or severe hepatotoxicity, but tolerate reintroduction with rifampin and isoniazid, rechallenge with pyrazinamide may be hazardous. In this circumstance, pyrazinamide may be permanently discontinued, with treatment extended to 9 months. Although pyrazinamide can be reintroduced in some milder cases of hepatotoxicity (144), the benefit of a shorter treatment course likely does not outweigh the risk of severe hepatotoxicity from pyrazinamide rechallenge Conclusion Many unanswered questions Nascent understanding of the basic mechanism and genetic factors associated with TB DILI Identification of those most likely to suffer increased and/or severity of DILI In the future, reexamination as new and available data