4 research outputs found

    Clinical presentation, causative drugs and outcome of patients with autoimmune features in two prospective DILI registries

    Get PDF
    Background & aims: Idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury (DILI) with autoimmune features is a liver condition with laboratory and histological characteristics similar to those of idiopathic autoimmune hepatitis (AIH), which despite being increasingly re-ported, remains largely undefined. We aimed to describe in-depth the features of this entity in a large series of patients from two prospective DILI registries. Methods: DILI cases with autoimmune features collected in the Spanish DILI Registry and the Latin American DILI Network were compared with DILI patients without autoimmune features and with an independent cohort of patients with AIH. Results: Out of 1,426 patients with DILI, 33 cases with autoimmune features were identified. Female sex was more frequent in AIH patients than in the other groups (p= .001). DILI cases with autoimmune features had significantly longer time to onset (p< .001) and resolution time (p= .004) than those without autoimmune features. Interestingly, DILI patients with autoimmune features who relapsed exhibited significantly higher total bilirubin and transaminases at onset and absence of peripheral eosinophilia than those who did not relapse. The likelihood of relapse increased over time, from 17% at 6 months to 50% 4 years after biochemical normalization. Statins, nitrofurantoin and minocycline were the drugs most frequently associated with this phenotype. Conclusions: DILI with autoimmune features shows different clinical features than DILI patients lacking characteristics of autoimmunity. Higher transaminases and total bilirubin values with no eosinophilia at presentation increase the likelihood of relapse in DILI with autoimmune features. As the tendency to relapse increases over time, these patients will require long-term follow-up.Instituto de Salud Carlos III; Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional— FEDER, Grant/Award Number: UMA18- FEDERJA-193, PI18/00901, PI19/00883 and PI21/01248; Consejería de Salud y Familia de la Junta de Andalucía, Grant/Award Number: P18-RT- 3364 and PI- 0310- 2018; Agencia Española del Medicamento; Sara Borrell, Grant/Award Number: CD20/00083; Rio Hortega, Grant/Award Number: CM21/00074; Garantía Juvenil, Grant/Award Number: SNGJ5Y6-09; Junta de Andalucía and European Social Fund; European Cooperation in Science and Technology; Universidad de Málaga/CBUA Funding for open access charge: Universidad de Málga / CBU

    Nurses' perceptions of aids and obstacles to the provision of optimal end of life care in ICU

    Get PDF
    Contains fulltext : 172380.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access

    Modeling drug-induced liver injury: current status and future prospects.

    No full text
    Idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury (iDILI) is a challenging and unpredictable multifactorial condition. At present, validated preclinical models for the prediction of the hepatotoxic potential of a given drug are scarce. This review intends to sum up the current knowledge about in vitro (including hepatocyte 2D cultures, cocultures with non-parenchymal cells, 3D configurations and non-typical closer to reality in vitro models), in vivo (covering models for immunological and oxidative stress features, humanized mouse-based and non-rodent models) and in silico approaches for iDILI modeling, highlighting the recent advances in each topic. The future strategy for iDILI modeling should be patient-centered. Future animal and cell-based models, with more predictive value, will be easier to design by using a more translational approach based on mechanisms demonstrated in humans. Genetic and epigenetic information gathered from iDILI patients, together with data from in vitro and in vivo studies, could be used to develop sophisticated predictive in silico models to find compounds with iDILI potential. Collecting genetic, metabolic, and biomarker data from patient cohorts might be another option to create a 'fingerprint' characteristic of people at risk, allowing for the development of new, mechanistic strategies to enhance iDILI in vitro evaluation
    corecore