Publication:
A new framework for advancing in drug-induced liver injury research. The Prospective European DILI Registry.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2022-08-15

Authors

Björnsson, Einar S
Stephens, Camilla
Atallah, Edmond
Robles-Diaz, Mercedes
Alvarez-Alvarez, Ismael
Gerbes, Alexander
Weber, Sabine
Stirnimann, Guido
Kullak-Ublick, Gerd
Cortez-Pinto, Helena

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Metrics
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

No multi-national prospective study of drug-induced liver injury (DILI) has originated in Europe. The design of a prospective European DILI registry, clinical features and short-term outcomes of the cases and controls is reported. Patients with suspected DILI were prospectively enrolled in the United Kingdom, Spain, Germany, Switzerland, Portugal and Iceland, 2016-2021. DILI cases or non-DILI acute liver injury controls following causality assessment were enrolled. Of 446 adjudicated patients, 246 DILI patients and 100 had acute liver injury due to other aetiologies, mostly autoimmune hepatitis (n = 42) and viral hepatitis (n = 34). DILI patients (mean age 56 years), 57% women, 60% with jaundice and 3.6% had pre-existing liver disease. DILI cases and non-DILI acute liver injury controls had similar demographics, clinical features and outcomes. A single agent was implicated in 199 (81%) DILI cases. Amoxicillin-clavulanate, flucloxacillin, atorvastatin, nivolumab/ipilimumab, infliximab and nitrofurantoin were the most commonly implicated drugs. Multiple conventional medications were implicated in 37 (15%) and 18 cases were caused by herbal and dietary supplements. The most common single causative drug classes were antibacterials (40%) and antineoplastic/immunomodulating agents (27%). Overall, 13 (5.3%) had drug-induced autoimmune-like hepatitis due to nitrofurantoin, methyldopa, infliximab, methylprednisolone and minocycline. Only six (2.4%) DILI patients died (50% had liver-related death), and another six received liver transplantation. In this first multi-national European prospective DILI Registry study, antibacterials were the most commonly implicated medications, whereas antineoplastic and immunomodulating agents accounted for higher proportion of DILI than previously described. This European initiative provides an important opportunity to advance the study on DILI.

Description

MeSH Terms

Humans
Female
Middle Aged
Male
Prospective Studies
Infliximab
Nitrofurantoin
Immunomodulating Agents
Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury
Anti-Bacterial Agents
Registries

DeCS Terms

CIE Terms

Keywords

drug aetiologies, drug-induced autoimmune-like hepatitis, drug-induced liver injury, outcomes, prospective study

Citation