A new framework for advancing in Drug-Induced Liver Injury research. The Prospective European DILI Registry.

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; Grove, Jane I; Lucena, M Isabel; Andrade, Raul J; Aithal, Guruprasad P (2023). A new framework for advancing in Drug-Induced Liver Injury research. The Prospective European DILI Registry. Liver international, 43(1), pp. 115-126. Wiley 10.1111/liv.15378

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BACKGROUND & AIMS

No multi-national prospective study of drug-induced liver injury (DILI) has originated from Europe. The design of a prospective European DILI registry, clinical features and short-term outcomes of the cases and controls is reported.

METHODS

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.

RESULTS

Of 446 adjudicated patients, 246 DILI patients and 100 had acute liver injury due to other etiologies, mostly autoimmune hepatitis (n=42) and viral hepatitis (n=34). DILI patients (mean age 56 years), 57% women, 60% with jaundice and 3.6% pre-existing liver disease. DILI cases and non-DILI 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 medications were implicated in 37 (15%) and 18 cases were caused by herbal and dietary supplements. Most common 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 a liver transplantation.

CONCLUSIONS

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.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > Department of Gastro-intestinal, Liver and Lung Disorders (DMLL) > Clinic of Visceral Surgery and Medicine > Hepatology

UniBE Contributor:

Stirnimann, Guido

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health

ISSN:

1478-3231

Publisher:

Wiley

Language:

English

Submitter:

Pubmed Import

Date Deposited:

29 Jul 2022 12:13

Last Modified:

30 Jul 2023 00:25

Publisher DOI:

10.1111/liv.15378

PubMed ID:

35899490

Uncontrolled Keywords:

drug etiologies drug-induced autoimmune-like hepatitis drug-induced liver injury outcomes prospective study

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/171634

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/171634

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