23 - Hepatotoxicity Flashcards
1
Q
What are the types of hepatotoxicity? Briefly describe each
A
- Direct -> liver injury caused by the drug or its metabolites; usually dose related (so therapeutic doses shouldn’t cause hepatotoxicity); predictable
- - Ex: acetaminophen - Idiosyncratic -> not predictable; not reproducible
- Indirect -> drug or its metabolites aren’t directly causing hepatotoxicity, but are causing it in an indirect way (ex: chemotherapy decreases immune system, which can increase risk of viral hepatitis)
2
Q
What are the common phenotypes of drug-induced liver injury? What are characteristics of each?
A
- Cholestatic -> alk phos will be high
- Hepatocelluar -> AST/ALT significantly increased (10x ULN)
- - When bilirubin is also high => acute liver injury
3
Q
Risk factors for drug-induced liver injury?
A
- Genotype, epigenetics
- Lifestyle, alcohol
- Co-medication
- Inflammatory episodes
- Disease
- Mitochondrial heteroplasmy
4
Q
High bilirubin commonly causes _____
A
Jaundice and itching
5
Q
When to d/c drug if suspected drug-induced liver injury?
A
- ALT/AST > 8x ULN
- ALT/AST > 5x ULN for > 2 weeks
- ALT/AST > 3x ULN and total bili > 2x ULN OR INR > 1.5
- ALT/AST > 3x ULN w/ symptoms
6
Q
When should the drug causing a drug-induced liver injury NOT be re-challenged?
A
- Px w/ significantly increased enzymes (> 5x ULN)
- Px w/ accompanying signs of an immunologic reaction
7
Q
What are other causes of liver injuries?
A
- Acute viral hepatitis
- Alcoholic and autoimmune hepatitis
- Biliary tract disorders
- CV causes
- Other uncommon causes
8
Q
Which patient groups are at high risk for acetaminophen toxicity?
A
- Glutathione depleted -> malnutrition, anorexia, alcoholic, AIDS
- CYP P450 (CYP2E1) induced -> increased production of NAPQI, ethanol, rifampicin, anticonvulsants (phenytoin, phenobarbital, carbamazepine)