Insights into medication-induced liver injury: Understanding and management strategies
Vatsalya Tiwari, Shrishti Shandily, Jessielina Albert, Vaibhav Mishra, Manoj Dikkatwar, Rohit Singh, Sujit Kumar Sah, Sharad Chand
Abstract
Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) has increasingly become a major concern in Western countries since the late 1960s, with an estimated annual incidence of 13.9 to 19.1 cases per 100,000 people. DILI is a significant cause of acute liver failure, exhibiting a high mortality rate of 10-50%. Its etiology includes medications, herbal products, and dietary supplements, exacerbated by pre-existing liver conditions, sonorities, pregnancy, and nutritional deficiencies. It is categorized into intrinsic and idiosyncratic reactions. Intrinsic DILI, dose-dependent and predictable, is primarily caused by substances like paracetamol, which leads to liver toxicity through direct metabolic pathways. In contrast, idiosyncratic DILI is less common, unpredictable, and affects susceptible individuals, with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, antibiotics, and cardiovascular agents frequently implicated in hospitals. Oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, bile salt export inhibition, and stress on the endoplasmic reticulum are some DILI-related pathophysiology. Diagnosis relies on biochemical tests, serological markers, radiological investigations, and liver biopsy. Management strategies emphasize the identification and cessation of the offending drugs, supportive care, and specific treatment options targeted to the culprit drugs. Management depends on the severity and nature of the injury. Medication-induced liver injury: Drugs, mechanism and clinical presentations. • The spectrum of DILI encompasses around 1/5 th of total population prescribed with medications. • It causes acute liver failure with significant morbidity and mortality. • Intrinsic DILI is dose dependent and idiosyncratic is usually unpredictable. • Diagnosis incudes laboratory test; management includes cessation of culprit drugs and supportive cure.