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Liver injury in inflammatory bowel disease: Long-term follow-up study of 786 patients

Authors :
J. Maté
Ricardo Moreno-Otero
Javier P. Gisbert
Marta Luna
M. Velasco
Yago González-Lama
Inés D. Pousa
Source :
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases. 13:1106-1114
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2007.

Abstract

Background: The aim of the study was to evaluate the incidence of abnormality of liver tests (LTs) or hepatotoxicity in a large group of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients and, specifically, to assess the incidence of azathioprine (AZA) / mercaptopurine (MP)-induced liver injury in a long-term follow-up study. Methods: All consecutive IBD patients followed for at least 5 years were included in this retrospective study. LTs including alanine transaminase, aspartate transaminase, alkaline phosphatase, γ-glutamyl transferase, and bilirubin were periodically monitored. “Abnormality-of-LTs” was defined as LTs between N (upper limit of the normal range) and 2 N, and “liver injury/hepatotoxicity” as LTs >2 N. Results: A total of 786 patients were included, and 138 received AZA/MP; 120 patients (15%) and 39 (5%) presented abnormality of LTs or hepatotoxicity, respectively, during follow-up. The most frequent explanations were AZA/MP treatment and fatty liver disease. Among AZA/MP-treated patients (690 patient-years follow-up) the incidence of abnormal LTs and hepatotoxicity was, respectively, 7.1% and 2.6% per patient-year. Most patients spontaneously normalized LTs despite maintaining AZA/MP. These drugs were withdrawn due to hepatotoxicity (LTs >5 N and lack of decrease despite 50% dose reduction) in 3.6% of the patients and all of them normalized LTs. Conclusions: In IBD patients, AZA or MP treatment induces abnormality of LTs in a relatively high proportion of the cases, but the development of true hepatotoxicity/liver injury is exceptional. Moreover, most of the cases of thiopurine-induced hepatotoxicity in IBD patients are mild, and the abnormalities in LTs spontaneously return to normal values despite AZA/MP being maintained, therapy withdrawal being necessary in only ≈4% of the patients. (Inflamm Bowel Dis)

Details

ISSN :
10780998
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....58fdb44d1cdc5fa976909923d63b8d48