Aim: Liver damage due to facultative hepatotoxins is scarcely foreseeable. We evaluated the prevalence of acute drug-induced liver injury (DILI) in a specific setting, assessing eventual interactions with pre-existing hepatic illnesses. Methods: The research was carried out in an Italian tertiary care hospital, by analyzing 248 patients with non-advanced liver disease, divided into two well-matched groups: 174 patients (median age 53, 94 females) with hepatitis C virus-related chronic hepatitis; and 74 (median age 55, 39 females) with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Results: Six patients (2.4% of the whole population) belonging to the NAFLD group (chi(2)-test, P = 0.004) suffered from acute hepatoxicity related to the following drugs, that is antihypertensive, acting on platelet aggregation, antimicrobial, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory and proton pump inhibitor. The NAFLD presence was an independent risk factor in determining drug-related acute hepatitis, with an odds ratio of 3.95 (95% confidence intervals: 11.48-1.35). Central obesity was relevant in every patient with acute toxicity. Alcohol consumption and drug association did not influence the acute drug-induced liver damage. Conclusion: NAFLD conveys a nearly fourfold increase of DILI risk in obese middle-aged patients. NAFLD, characterized by mitochondrial dysfunction, could predispose to drug-induced hepatotoxicity that probably shares the same pathophysiological mechanism.
A prospective study of acute drug-induced liver injury in patients suffering from non-alcoholic fatty liver disease / Tarantino, G; Conca, P; Basile, Vincenzo; Gentile, Antonio; Capone, Domenico; Polichetti, G; Leo, E.. - In: HEPATOLOGY RESEARCH. - ISSN 1386-6346. - STAMPA. - 37:6(2007), pp. 410-415. [10.1111/j.1872-034X.2007.00072.x]
A prospective study of acute drug-induced liver injury in patients suffering from non-alcoholic fatty liver disease
BASILE, VINCENZO;GENTILE, ANTONIO;CAPONE, DOMENICO;
2007
Abstract
Aim: Liver damage due to facultative hepatotoxins is scarcely foreseeable. We evaluated the prevalence of acute drug-induced liver injury (DILI) in a specific setting, assessing eventual interactions with pre-existing hepatic illnesses. Methods: The research was carried out in an Italian tertiary care hospital, by analyzing 248 patients with non-advanced liver disease, divided into two well-matched groups: 174 patients (median age 53, 94 females) with hepatitis C virus-related chronic hepatitis; and 74 (median age 55, 39 females) with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Results: Six patients (2.4% of the whole population) belonging to the NAFLD group (chi(2)-test, P = 0.004) suffered from acute hepatoxicity related to the following drugs, that is antihypertensive, acting on platelet aggregation, antimicrobial, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory and proton pump inhibitor. The NAFLD presence was an independent risk factor in determining drug-related acute hepatitis, with an odds ratio of 3.95 (95% confidence intervals: 11.48-1.35). Central obesity was relevant in every patient with acute toxicity. Alcohol consumption and drug association did not influence the acute drug-induced liver damage. Conclusion: NAFLD conveys a nearly fourfold increase of DILI risk in obese middle-aged patients. NAFLD, characterized by mitochondrial dysfunction, could predispose to drug-induced hepatotoxicity that probably shares the same pathophysiological mechanism.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.