Abstract

Adverse drug reactions may mimic almost any kind of liver disease. Acute hepatitis is often due to the formation of reactive metabolites in the liver. Despite several protective mechanisms (epoxide hydrolases, conjugation with glutathione), this formation may lead to predictable toxic hepatitis after huge overdoses (e.g. paracetamol), or to idiosyncratic toxic hepatitis after therapeutic doses (e.g. isoniazid). Both genetic factors (e.g. constitutive levels of cytochrome P-450 isoenzymes, or defects in protective mechanisms) and acquired factors (e.g. malnutrition, or chronic intake of alcohol or other microsomal enzyme inducers) may explain the unique susceptibility of some patients. Formation of chemically reactive metabolites may also lead to allergic hepatitis, probably through immunization against plasma membrane protein epitopes modified by the covalent binding of the reactive metabolites. This may be the mechanism for acute hepatitis produced by many drugs (e.g. amineptine, erythromycin derivatives, halothane, imipramine, isaxonine, α-methyldopa, tienilic acid, etc.). Genetic defects in several protective mechanisms (e.g. epoxide hydrolase, acetylation) may explain the unique susceptibility of some patients, possibly by increasing exposure to allergenic, metabolite-altered plasma membrane protein epitopes. Like toxic idiosyncratic hepatitis, allergic hepatitis occurs in a few patients only. Unlike toxic hepatitis, allergic hepatitis is frequently associated with fever, rash or other hypersensitivity manifestations; it may be hepatocellular, mixed or cholestatic; it promptly recurs after inadvertent drug rechallenge. Lysosomal phospholipidosis occurs frequently with three antianginal drugs (diethylaminoethoxyhexestrol, amiodarone and perhexiline). These cationic, amphiphilic drugs may form phospholipid-drug complexes within lysosomes. Such complexes resist phospholipases and accumulate within enlarged lysosomes, forming myeloid figures. This phospholipidosis has little clinical importance. In a few patients, however, it is associated with alcoholic-like liver lesions leading to overt liver disease and, at times, cirrhosis. Subjects with a deficiency in a particular isoenzyme of cytochrome P-450 poorly metabolize perhexiline and are at higher risk of developing liver lesions. Prolonged, drug-induced liver-cell necrosis may also lead to subacute hepatitis, chronic hepatitis or even cirrhosis. This usually occurs when the drug administration is continued, either because the liver disease remains undetected or because its drug aetiology is overlooked. Several autoantibodies may be present. Physicians should consider the possibility of a drug-related aetiology in any patient with hepatobiliary disease. Prompt withdrawal of suspected drugs will usually avoid extension or prolongation of the liver disease. There are exceptions, however, either when the drug slowly leaves the liver (e.g. amiodarone or perhexiline), or perhaps when autoimmunity is present. Determination of the mechanisms of hepatitis may permit the safer use of present drugs and the rational development of safer analogues. Increased efforts to characterize the various genetic defects responsible for the unique susceptibility of some individuals to certain drugs may make it possible to detect subjects at risk.

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