Abstract

A case series of hepatotoxicity associated with an extract of Artemisia annua L. was identified through the New Zealand spontaneous adverse drug reaction reporting system. A. annua extract, produced using a supercritical carbon dioxide extraction method and formulated with grapeseed oil, has been marketed in New Zealand as a natural product for joint health. As of 31 January 2019, the New Zealand Pharmacovigilance Centre had received 29 reports of hepatic adverse reactions occurring in patients taking A. annua extract in grapeseed oil. The case reports were assessed for patient and adverse reaction characteristics, patterns of A. annua extract use and causality (based on the WHO-UMC system for standardized case causality assessment). Patients were aged 47 to 93 years (median 67). Time to onset of hepatotoxicity from starting A. annua extract was 7 days to approximately 12 months in the 23 reports with this information. Nineteen of these reports indicated onset within 12 weeks. A. annua extract was the sole suspect medicine in 27 reports. A few patients had possible predisposing conditions. Twenty-seven patients were reported to have recovered or improved on stopping A. annua extract. Nine patients required hospital admission. The pattern of hepatic injury varied. Jaundice, often with pruritus and dark urine, was experienced by 16 patients. There was considerable consistency across case reports from various reporters. We assessed the case reports as a series using the Bradford Hill guidelines for causal inference and concluded that there was a safety signal of a causal association between the A. annua extract and hepatotoxicity sufficient to be communicated and investigated further.

Highlights

  • Use of the herb Artemisia annua L. in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) can be traced back two millennia (Hsu, 2006; Graziose et al, 2010; Tu, 2011)

  • We identified all case reports in the New Zealand Pharmacovigilance Centre (NZPhvC) database that included A. annua extract as a suspect medicine and a hepatobiliary system organ class (SOC) adverse reaction term (WHO Adverse Reaction Terminology)

  • The R value is defined as the ratio of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) to alkaline phosphatase (ALP) values expressed as multiples of the upper limit of normal (ULN)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Use of the herb Artemisia annua L. in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) can be traced back two millennia (Hsu, 2006; Graziose et al, 2010; Tu, 2011). In the fourth century CE, Ge Hong recommended qinghao (A. annua, sweet wormwood, family Asteraceae) for treating intermittent fever. Reference to the use of A. annua herb as an anti-inflammatory can be found in TCM texts from at least 200 CE (Hsu, 2006; Graziose et al, 2010). Artemisinin-based combination therapy is the recommended treatment for uncomplicated P. falciparum infections (World Health Organization, 2015). A. annua herb has gained attention as a potential remedy for inflammatory conditions (Wang et al, 2011; Hunt et al, 2015; Shi et al, 2015; Wang et al, 2019)

Methods
Discussion
Conclusion
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