Abstract

L-Asparaginase is a bacterial enzyme used in the treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukemia. In the ongoing U.S. Drug-Induced Liver Injury Network (DILIN) prospective study, standard and pegylated asparaginase were the most frequent cause of liver injury with jaundice among anti-cancer agents (8 of 40: 20%). The unique features of this hepatotoxicity are described. Eight cases from 5 DILIN centers were reviewed for clinical course, laboratory values, imaging, and histopathology. Seven females, aged 29-59years, and one 8-year-old boy, all with leukemia, developed jaundice within 9-21days (median 15days) of starting asparaginase or pegaspargase, during the first (n = 6) or second (n = 2) cycle. Prominent symptoms were jaundice (n = 8), fatigue (6), abdominal pain (6) but rarely pruritus (1). Initial median ALT level was 284 U/L (range 83-1076), Alk P 159 U/L (64-452), and bilirubin 4.4mg/dL (3.7-8.4). Bilirubin levels rose thereafter in all patients to median peak of 17.5mg/dL (11.7-25.7), INR rose to 1.1-1.7 and serum albumin fell to 1.5-2.6g/dL. Hepatic imaging revealed fatty liver in all patients. Liver biopsy showed steatosis but minimal hepatocyte necrosis. One patient restarted on pegaspargase re-developed less severe injury. Asparaginase is a common cause of antineoplastic-induced liver injury with jaundice, typically with short latency, marked steatosis, and prolonged jaundice, which can lead to delays in antileukemic therapy. The cause of injury is likely direct inhibition of hepatic protein synthesis caused by asparagine depletion.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call