* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Drug-Induced Liver Injury
Toxicodynamics wikipedia , lookup
Psychopharmacology wikipedia , lookup
Drug design wikipedia , lookup
Neuropharmacology wikipedia , lookup
Drug discovery wikipedia , lookup
Pharmaceutical industry wikipedia , lookup
Prescription drug prices in the United States wikipedia , lookup
Neuropsychopharmacology wikipedia , lookup
Pharmacokinetics wikipedia , lookup
Prescription costs wikipedia , lookup
Pharmacognosy wikipedia , lookup
Drug-Induced Liver Injury Soheil Altafi MD 1/27/15 DILI- Table of Contents • Introduction • Epidemiology • Liver - Drug Metabolism • Factors influencing Drug Metabolism • Mechanisms of Drug-induced Hepatotoxicity • Clinical Presentation • Drugs that cause DILI • Diagnosis • Treatments Introduction • Caused by many common drugs • • • • Antibiotics OTC medications Herbs Supplements • 0.1 to 3% of hospital admissions1 • ~600 liver transplantations per year in US • 10% fatality seen in cases with severe ALT elevation and jaundice2 1. Dig Dis Sci 2007;52:2463-71 2. Kaplowitz N. Nat Rev Drug Discov 2005;4:489-499 Epidemiology • Annual incidence between 10 and 15 per 10,000 to 100,000 people • 30% of cases of acute hepatitis • 10% of consultation by hepatologists • Most common cause of acute liver failure in the US Liver - Drug Metabolism • Biotransformation • Phase 1- oxidation • 60 genes code for CYP (family- ie CYP2, subfamily- ie CYP2E1) • Hepatic metabolism of exogenous drugs- CYP1, 2, 3, and lesser extent 4 • CYP3A4- 60% of all hepatic cytochromes, affecting 50% of commonly used drugs • Enzyme activity dependent on several exogenous factors Liver - Drug Metabolism • Biotransformation • Phase 2- conjugation • (UDP)-glucuronyl transferases (UGT1, & UGT2) • Sulfotransferases • Glutathione S-transferases • Decreases pharmacologic activity • Enhances clearance Liver - Drug Metabolism • Biotransformation • Phase 3 – transport • ABC superfamily • MDR1/ABCB1 • MRP2/ABCC2 • MDR3/ABCB4 • BSEP/ABCB11 • Altered activity of these transporters can lead to hepatotoxicity Factors influencing Drug Metabolism • Pharmacogenetics • Polymorphisms of phase 1, 2, 3 enzymes • Ie CYP2C9/2C19- warfarin, omeprazole, tolbutamide/mephenytoin • Ie glutathione S-transferase- acetaminophen • HLA- flucloxacillin, augmentin • Nutrition • Ie CYP2E1 • Fasting/malnutrition • Obesity • Grapefruit Factors influencing Drug Metabolism • Multi-drug effect • Age and sex • Dose Factors influencing Drug Metabolism • Disease-related changes- expression of CYP • DM • Hypothyroidism • Underlying liver disease • Decreased P450 • Decreased hepatic clearance Mechanism of DILI • Proposed mechanisms • • • • • • Intrinsic injury (direct or indirect injury to hepatocyte) Drug transporter/metabolizing enzyme modulation Mitochondrial toxicity Bile Salt Export Pump (BSEP) inhibition Modulation of immune reactions (idiosyncratic injury) Histone acetylation Mechanisms Mechanisms Mechanisms Clinical Presentation • Clinical Presentation • Hepatocelluar (cytotoxic) injury • Cholestatic injury • Mixed injury • Mechanism of hepatotoxicity • Predictable • Idiosyncratic • Histologic findings (liver biopsy usually not necessary) • Hepatitis • Cholestasis • Steatosis Clinical Presentation • Predictable- intrinsic hepatotoxins • Predictably cause dose-dependent hepatocellular necrosis • Latent period- brief (hours to a few days) • Fairly consistent from person to person and among animal models • Serum aminotransferases 8 to 500 times normal; ALP less elevated • Often removed from clinical use • Some still in use due to known dose-related toxicity • Hepatotoxic in large doses (ie acetaminophen, iron sulfate) • Known dose-effect (ie ethanol, IV tetracycline, L-asparaginase) Clinical Presentation • Idiosyncratic • Unpredictable • Species-specific, often cannot be reproduced in animal models • Latent period- variable, generally 1 to 3 months • Doses >50mg/day more likely to cause DILI compared to dosing <10mg Clinical Presentation • Hepatocellular • ALT/ALP ratio >5 • ~50% of DILI is hepatocellular • AST>>ALT- think muscle injury or alcoholic hepatitis • Neither above 400 • Cholestatic • ALP> 2x ULN • ALT/ALP ratio < 2 • Mixed • 5> ALT/ALP ratio > 2 • Hy’s law- serum bilirubin >2x ULN, aminotransferases >3x ULN • Associated with worse prognosis • Mortality as high as 14 percent Clinical Presentation • Acute DILI • • • • Mild asymptomatic liver test abnormalities Cholestasis with pruritis Acute illness with jaundice- resembles viral hepatitis Acute liver failure • Chronic DILI- may resemble • • • • AIH PBC Sclerosing cholangitis Alcoholic liver disease Clinical Presentation • Symptoms • Acute DILI • • • • • • • • Malaise Low-grade fever Anorexia Nausea and Vomiting RUQ pain Jaundice Acholic stools Dark uine • Chronic Dili • may present with signs of cirrhosis or decompensation • Jaundice • Palmer erythema • Ascites • HE Acetaminophen Hepatotoxicity • Normally metabolized by glucuronidation and sulfation • N-hydroxylation (CYP2E1) N-acetyl-p-benzoquinone (NAPQI) • NAPQI scavenged by glutathione • Overdose usually >7-10gm (in nonalcoholic patients) • Glutathione depleted increased NAPQIhepatotoxicity • CYP2E1 induced by fasting, alcohol, Rx (ie INH), • Treatment • Ipecac- if time of ingestion <4hrs • N-acetylcysteine (NAC)- increases level of glutathione Drugs that cause DILI • Isoniazid (INH) – 300mg qD • Mechanisms • • • • • • • • Reactive metabolites Immunoallergic injury: HLA DQB1*0201 Mitochondrial injury Inhibiting histone deacetylase Presents insidiously 4-6 months after Rifampin increases likelihood of INH tox INH can increase acetaminophen tox Hx of liver disease- serial monitoring (alternate drug if level >100) • Amoxicillin:clavulanate- 500-3000mg qD • Immunoallergic injury: Class 1 & 2 HLA DQB1*0602, *1501 • Cholestatic hepatitis within weeks of first dose Drugs that cause DILI • Nitrofurantoin • Liver injury usually seen in women taking for >6 months • Labs- high transaminases; HLA-B8 and ANA are usually positive • Steroids (anabolic, OCP, tamoxifen, glucocorticoids) • Cholestatic injury • Canalicular injury • Anesthetic Agents (ie Halothane) • • • • Risk increases with more exposure and present within 2 weeks Labs- eosinophilia, AST/ALT 500-1000 IU/L Mechanism- reactive metabolites (trifluoroacetyl), and autoanitgens Poor prognosis- age>40, obesity, HE, elevated INR (mortality 80% without OLT) Herbal & Supplements • 9-14% of cases of DILI in Western countries • Longer exposure before DILI • 42% in US use some form of alternative therapy • 69% do not disclose supplement use to health care providers • 52% use herbal/sup concurrently with prescription meds • Common- Herbalife, Hydroxycut, Chinese herbal, LipoKinetix, Androstenedione, Black cohosh, Green tea extract, Mistletoe, Licorice Diagnosis • Obtaining a thorough history • Performing blood test to look for other causes on hepatic injur • Cholestasis- imaging to rule out biliary obstruction • Review of drugs exposed preceding the onset of liver injury • Underlying liver disease is excluded- rule out other causes • Stopping drug believed to cause injury leads to improvement • Rechallenge- rapid and severe recurrence; not advised Diagnosis • Drug exposure • Stop drugs that are commonly known to cause DILI • Always ask about any OTC, herbal and/or supplements taken • If possible review a patient’s pharmacy records • Check drugs on http://livertox.nih.gov/ • Case presentations • Drug-specific liver injury characteristics • Direct link to references and other online recources • New cases of DILI welcome Diagnosis • Roussel Uclaf Causality Assessment Method (RUCAM) Diagnosis • Drug-induced acute liver failure • Most frequent cause of liver failure requiring evaluation for transplantation • 11th Annual FDA/PhRMA/AASLD Hepatotoxicity Conference • Acute Liver Failure Study Group ~1700 cases • Acetaminophen-induced 46% (n=787) • Other drug-induced liver failure 12% (n=202) • Acetaminophen-induced- half unintentional narc/aceta overdose • Coagulopathy (INR>1.5) • Encephalopathy- day/night confusion, disorientation, sleepiness Treatment of DILI • Discontinue suspected drug- most cases, liver injury should spontaneously resolve • N-Acetylcysteine for acetaminophen liver injury • Liver transplantation • Limited use or experimental • • • • IV carnitine for valproate liver injury Ursodeoxycholic acid for cholestasis Corticosteroids for hypersensitivity cases Plasmapheresis The End