Publication:
Long-term sequelae of drug-induced liver injury.

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Date

2021-10-22

Authors

Björnsson, Einar S
Andrade, Raul J

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Abstract

Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) has a very variable clinical and biochemical phenotype and differs widely in severity, from mild injury to life-threatening liver failure. Chronic injury has also been reported to occur at a variable frequency, ranging from 3.4% to 39%, 6-12 months after discontinuing the implicated agent. This wide range is probably related to various definitions of chronic liver injury and variable selection of patients. The long-term sequalae of this chronic injury in terms of morbidity and mortality are unclear, although rare vanishing bile duct syndrome is associated with an unfavourable prognosis, with increased risk of chronic liver failure and need for liver transplantation. Other forms of long-term sequalae associated with DILI are progressive fibrosis, autoimmune-like hepatitis, secondary sclerosing cholangitis, sinusoidal obstruction syndrome and, as a common final stage, the development of cirrhosis, portal hypertension and its complications. Immune checkpoint inhibitors, which can cause an autoimmune-like phenotype have also recently been shown to cause sclerosing cholangitis with cytotoxic T CD8+ cell infiltration in biliary tracts. DILI has been shown to have a significant impact on health-related quality of life but very little is known about its psychological consequences in the long-term. Further investigations with structured long-term follow-up and periodic quality of life surveys are needed to assess the impact of DILI on psychological outcomes, particularly in those with chronic sequelae.

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Adult
Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury
Female
Humans
Liver Function Tests
Long Term Adverse Effects
Prognosis
Risk Factors

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Keywords

DILI, cirrhosis, drug-induced autoimmune hepatitis, hepatotoxicity, psychological disability, secondary sclerosing cholangitis, sinusoidal obstruction syndrome, vanishing bile duct syndrome

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