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Death and liver transplantation within 2 years of onset of drug‐induced liver injury

Authors :
Naga Chalasani
Paul H. Hayashi
Averell H. Sherker
Don C. Rockey
Neil Kaplowitz
K. Rajender Reddy
Jay H. Hoofnagle
Hans L. Tillmann
Jiezhan Gu
Huiman X. Barnhart
Robert J. Fontana
Source :
Hepatology. 66:1275-1285
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2017.

Abstract

Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is an important cause of death and indication for liver transplantation (fatality). The role of DILI in these fatalities ispoorly characterized particularly when fatalities occur > 26 weeks after DILI onset. We analyzed patients in the U.S. Drug-Induced Liver Injury Network prospective study having a fatal outcome within 2 years of onset. Each case was reviewed by 8 Network investigators and categorized as DILI having a primary, contributory or no role in the fatality. We subcategorized primary role cases as acute, chronic, acute-on-chronic or acute cholestatic liver failure. For contributory and no role cases, we assigned a primary cause of death. Among 1089 patients, 107 (9.8%) fatalities occurred within 2 years. DILI had a primary role in 68 (64%), a contributory role in 15 (14%) and no role in 22 (21%); 2 had insufficient data. Among primary role cases, 74% had acute, 13% chronic, 7% acute-on-chronic and 6% acute cholestatic failure. For the 15 contributory role cases, common causes of death included sepsis, malignancy and severe cutaneous reactions with multi-organ failure. For the 22 no role cases, malignancies accounted for most fatalities. Higher bilirubin, coagulopathy, leukocytosis and thrombocytopenia were independently associated with DILI fatalities. nR Hy’s Law had a higher positive predictive value for overall fatality (14% vs. 10%) and stronger independent association with DILI fatalities within 26 weeks compared to the original version of Hy’s Law (HR: 6.2, CI 3.4 – 11.1 vs. 2.2, CI 1.3–3.7). DILI leads directly or indirectly to fatality in 7.6% of cases; 40% of these have non-acute liver failure courses. nR Hy’s Law better identifies risk for death compared to the original Hy’s Law.

Details

ISSN :
15273350 and 02709139
Volume :
66
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Hepatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8589f0a84a9879709863a752e7c333e6