How to Diagnose and Exclude Drug-Induced Liver Injury

Author:

Watkins Paul B.

Abstract

The diagnosis of drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is largely a diagnosis of exclusion because, with the possible exception of protein:drug adducts in paracetamol overdose, there are no laboratory, biopsy or imaging tests that alone are capable of establishing an unequivocal diagnosis of DILI. However, it is increasingly appreciated that drugs that cause DILI typically have characteristic clinical presentations or ‘signatures' that can be very useful in the diagnosis of DILI. Indeed, knowing a drug's DILI signature (or sometimes signatures) and the incidence rate of DILI during treatment with that drug are perhaps the most useful pieces of historical information in arriving at the diagnosis of DILI. Components of the signature include the typical latency from the onset of treatment, whether there are extrahepatic manifestations, whether the injury is hepatocellular, cholestatic or mixed, and sometimes characteristic features on biopsy or serological testing (e.g. liver autoantibodies). A major advance has been the establishment of the LiverTox website (http://livertox.nih.gov/) which provides open access to standardized entries for over 600 different drugs, including the characteristic clinical presentations of DILI when known. LiverTox will also calculate the causality score for individual cases using the RUCAM instrument and case-specific data entered by the site user. However, the problem with standard diagnostic instruments such as the RUCAM is that DILI signatures are not incorporated into the scoring system. The person entering data must therefore subjectively weigh the RUCAM score with the characteristic DILI signature(s) of the drug to arrive at a diagnosis. In the future, it should be possible to construct improved diagnostic instruments that objectively incorporate DILI signatures, data-based estimates of the incidence rates of DILI from each implicated drug, and perhaps genetic variants associated with the risk of DILI.

Publisher

S. Karger AG

Subject

Gastroenterology,General Medicine

Cited by 19 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Idiosyncratic Adverse Drug Reactions;Reference Module in Biomedical Sciences;2024

2. Overview of Causality Assessment for Drug-Induced Liver Injury (DILI) in Clinical Trials;Drug Safety;2021-03-16

3. Idiosyncratic Drug-Induced Liver Injury: Mechanistic and Clinical Challenges;International Journal of Molecular Sciences;2021-03-14

4. A rare case of ciprofloxacin-induced cholestatic hepatits in the newborn;Open Journal of Pharmacology and Pharmacotherapeutics;2021-02-11

5. Understanding Idiosyncratic Toxicity: Lessons Learned from Drug-Induced Liver Injury;Journal of Medicinal Chemistry;2020-02-09

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