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Features and Outcomes of 899 Patients With Drug-Induced Liver Injury: The DILIN Prospective Study

Authors :
Naga Chalasani
Herbert L. Bonkovsky
Robert Fontana
William Lee
Andrew Stolz
Jayant Talwalkar
K. Rajendar Reddy
Paul B. Watkins
Victor Navarro
Huiman Barnhart
Jiezhun Gu
Jose Serrano
Jawad Ahmad
Nancy Bach
Meena Bansal
Huiman X. Barnhart
Kimberly Beavers
Herbert Bonkovsky
Francisco O. Calvo
Charissa Chang
Hari Conjeevaram
Gregory Conner
Jama Darling
Ynto de Boer
Douglas Dieterich
Frank DiPaola
Francisco A. Durazo
James E. (Jay) Everhart
Robert J. Fontana
Marwan S. Ghabril
David Goldstein
Vani Gopalreddy
Priya Grewal
Paul H. Hayashi
Jay Hoofnagle
Neil Kaplowitz
Suthat Liangpunsakul
Steven Lichtman
Lawrence Liu
Victor J. Navarro
Joseph Odin
Simona Rossi
Mark Russo
Thomas Schiano
José Serrano
Averell H. Sherker
Raj Vuppalanchi
Paul Watkins
Steven Zacks
Amanda Balasco
Kristin Chesney
Audrey Corne
Sherrie Cummings
Gale Groseclose
Alex Hammett
Judy Hooker
Varun Kesar
Sophana Mao
Kenari Marks
Regina McFadden
Yolanda Melgoza
Sherif Mikhail
Susan Milstein
Wendy Morlan
Val Peacock
Nidia Rosado
Tracy Russell
Maricruz Vega
Manisha Verma
Patricia Walker
Rachana Yalamanchili
Michelle McClanahan-Crowder
Katherine Galan
Jiezhun (Sherry) Gu
Tuan Chau
Kowsalya Ragavan
Hoss Rostami
Carmel Puglisi-Scharenbroich
Rebecca J. Torrance
Rebekah Van Raaphorst
Source :
Gastroenterology. 148:1340-1352.e7
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2015.

Abstract

Background & Aims The Drug-Induced Liver Injury Network is conducting a prospective study of patients with DILI in the United States. We present characteristics and subgroup analyses from the first 1257 patients enrolled in the study. Methods In an observational longitudinal study, we began collecting data on eligible individuals with suspected DILI in 2004, following them for 6 months or longer. Subjects were evaluated systematically for other etiologies, causes, and severity of DILI. Results Among 1257 enrolled subjects with suspected DILI, the causality was assessed in 1091 patients, and 899 were considered to have definite, highly likely, or probable DILI. Ten percent of patients died or underwent liver transplantation, and 17% had chronic liver injury. In the 89 patients (10%) with pre-existing liver disease, DILI appeared to be more severe than in those without (difference not statistically significant; P = .09) and mortality was significantly higher (16% vs 5.2%; P 365 days were nitrofurantoin (25%) or minocycline (17%). There were no differences in outcomes of patients with short vs long latency of DILI. Compared with individuals younger than 65 years, individuals 65 years or older (n = 149) were more likely to have cholestatic injury, although mortality and rate of liver transplantation did not differ. Nine patients (1%) had concomitant severe skin reactions; implicated agents were lamotrigine, azithromycin, carbamazepine, moxifloxacin, cephalexin, diclofenac, and nitrofurantoin. Four of these patients died. Conclusions Mortality from DILI is significantly higher in individuals with pre-existing liver disease or concomitant severe skin reactions compared with patients without. Additional studies are needed to confirm the association between azithromycin and increased DILI in patients with chronic liver disease. Older age and short or long latencies are not associated with DILI mortality.

Details

ISSN :
00165085
Volume :
148
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gastroenterology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b7249405e4a4a5ceb88207efacbedaa3