Drug-Induced Hepatotoxicity Flashcards

1
Q

What is the leading cause of acute liver failure in the US and what agency intends to respond to this?

A

Drug-induced hepatoxicity / liver injury (DILI)

The DILI network called DILIN is designed to study this problem

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2
Q

Are DILI’s predictable? What is associated with the highest mortality?

A

No -> no reliable way to predict or prevent at this time

Highest mortality is associated with development of jaundice.

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3
Q

Why is it often difficult to implicate drugs absolutely in liver injury?

A

It is a diagnosis of exclusion, since there may be other causes which could contribute

DILIN developed criteria to assess this

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4
Q

What are some of the risk factors of DILI?

A

Older females, with obesity, malnutrition, alcoholism, underlying liver disease, CYP polymorphism, or other underlying abnormalities

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5
Q

What drugs are known to cause a hepatitis-like picture?

A

Acute - phenytoin

Chronic - nitrofurantoin, alpha-methyldopa

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6
Q

What drugs are particularly known for a cholestatic picture?

A

Estrogen supplements / birth control pills

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7
Q

What drugs are known to cause a mixed cholestatic-hepatitis picture?

A

Amoxicillin/clavulanate, chlorpromazine

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8
Q

What drugs are known to cause a macrovesicular or microvesicular fatty liver?

A

Macrovesicular - corticosteroids

Microvesicular - tetracycline overdose

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9
Q

What drug is known to cause fibrosis of the liver and what is the workup for its treatment?

A

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

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10
Q

What drug is especially known for granulomatous liver disease?

A

Allopurinol

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11
Q

What substance is known to cause hepatic malignancies?

A

Vinyl chloride from PVC -> hepatic angiosarcoma

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12
Q

What liver injury does pre-marrow-transplant chemotherapy cause?

A

Hepatic veno-occlusive disease

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13
Q

What is a Phase I vs Phase II reaction?

A

Phase 1 - oxidation, reduction, hydrolysis

Phase 2 - conjugation to make drug water-soluble

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14
Q

Define what a “predictable” hepatotoxin is and give a couple examples.

A

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

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15
Q

What determines if acetaminophen is toxic or not and how does the antidote work?

A

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

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16
Q

What is the type of DILI accounted for by most hepatic drug reactions? What is the clinical course?

A

Unpredictable, idiosyncratic

-> occurs rarely for any drug, includes herbals

  • > long latent period (sensitization?) for several weeks before reaction
  • > rechallenge with same drug will lead to rapid reaction
  • > associated with fever, rash, eosinophilia (suggesting hypersensitivity)
17
Q

What are the prevailing theories for idiosyncratic drug reactions?

A
  1. Immunologic - drug metabolite + carrier protein forms hapten which induces an immune response, leading to hepatotoxicity
  2. Metabolic - drug + genetic polymorphisms -> unusually toxic metabolite or large amounts of toxic metabolite, leading to hepatotoxicity
18
Q

What drug reaction does phenytoin usually cause?

A

Acute hepatitis with delayed onset

May cause DRESS syndrome though:
Drug Reaction with Eosinophilia and Systemic Symptoms
-> fever, rash, eosinophilia, lymphadenopathy
-> mechanism unclear

19
Q

What type of drug causes the most DILI’s?

A

Antimicrobials

20
Q

What is the treatment for DILI?

A

Discontinue drug -> most reactions resolve after months

May need supportive care with corticosteroids in severe reactions

Worst case scenario: Liver transplant