Drug-Induced Hepatotoxicity Flashcards
What is the leading cause of acute liver failure in the US and what agency intends to respond to this?
Drug-induced hepatoxicity / liver injury (DILI)
The DILI network called DILIN is designed to study this problem
Are DILI’s predictable? What is associated with the highest mortality?
No -> no reliable way to predict or prevent at this time
Highest mortality is associated with development of jaundice.
Why is it often difficult to implicate drugs absolutely in liver injury?
It is a diagnosis of exclusion, since there may be other causes which could contribute
DILIN developed criteria to assess this
What are some of the risk factors of DILI?
Older females, with obesity, malnutrition, alcoholism, underlying liver disease, CYP polymorphism, or other underlying abnormalities
What drugs are known to cause a hepatitis-like picture?
Acute - phenytoin
Chronic - nitrofurantoin, alpha-methyldopa
What drugs are particularly known for a cholestatic picture?
Estrogen supplements / birth control pills
What drugs are known to cause a mixed cholestatic-hepatitis picture?
Amoxicillin/clavulanate, chlorpromazine
What drugs are known to cause a macrovesicular or microvesicular fatty liver?
Macrovesicular - corticosteroids
Microvesicular - tetracycline overdose
What drug is known to cause fibrosis of the liver and what is the workup for its treatment?
Methotrexate = fibrosis / cirrhosis
This is a dose-related toxicity with an insidious onset, worse with psoriasis
Liver biopsy is primary role in follow up, as LFTs may be normal
What drug is especially known for granulomatous liver disease?
Allopurinol
What substance is known to cause hepatic malignancies?
Vinyl chloride from PVC -> hepatic angiosarcoma
What liver injury does pre-marrow-transplant chemotherapy cause?
Hepatic veno-occlusive disease
What is a Phase I vs Phase II reaction?
Phase 1 - oxidation, reduction, hydrolysis
Phase 2 - conjugation to make drug water-soluble
Define what a “predictable” hepatotoxin is and give a couple examples.
Known direct toxins with dose-related severity, affecting all exposed individuals, reproducible in animals and causing distinctive liver histology
i.e. acetaminophen, carbon tetrachloride (dry-cleaning), amatoxin
What determines if acetaminophen is toxic or not and how does the antidote work?
Phase I - toxic
Phase II - safe
N-acetylcysteine works to replenish intracellular glutathione stores involved in dealing with toxic NAPQI accumultation. These are also depleted in alcoholism and malnutrition