Drug-induced liver injury can be caused by a variety of medications, supplements and herbal products (Appendix 1, available at www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.202026/tab-related-content)
Drug-induced liver injury is estimated to have an incidence of 14–19 cases per 100 000 individuals.1,2 Although asymptomatic liver enzyme elevation is the most common presentation, drug-induced liver injury is the most common cause of acute liver failure in most Western countries, accounting for more than 50% of cases.1 Drug-induced liver injury can occur in overdose or at therapeutic dosing, either because of direct, intrinsic drug hepatotoxicity or as a result of idiosyncratic (unpredictable) hepatotoxicity.
Drug-induced liver injury should be suspected in patients with new elevation of liver enzymes, prompting a review of drug exposures dating back as far as 3 months
Establishing a reliable timeline between exposure and injury onset is critical. Typical latency periods are 1–5 days with direct, and 5–90 days with idiosyncratic hepatotoxicity.1 Idiosyncratic hepatotoxicity can occur sooner if there has been previous exposure.2 Patterns of enzyme elevation include hepatocellular, cholestatic or mixed; attributing elevation patterns to specific drugs can be imprecise. LiverTox is a website sponsored by the National Institutes of Health, with descriptions of more than 1000 agents that can cause drug-induced liver injury.3
Diagnosis requires exclusion of alternate causes
Drug-induced liver injury can be particularly difficult to distinguish from autoimmune hepatitis because antibodies seen in this kind of hepatitis may also be positive in drug-induced liver injury.2 The Roussel Uclaf Causality Assessment Method (RUCAM) score is a clinical decision tool to help determine the probability of drug-induced liver injury.2
In most cases, resolution of drug-induced liver injury occurs after drug discontinuation
Liver enzyme levels usually decrease within days to weeks, with less than 10% of patients having chronic disease 1 year later.2,4 In cases of severe elevation of liver enzyme levels (alanine aminotransferase ≥ 5 × or alkaline phosphatase ≥ 2 × and total bilirubin ≥ 2 × upper limit of normal),2 clinical signs of liver failure, or if improvement is not seen within the expected time frame, specialist consultation and investigations (e.g., liver biopsy) for alternative causes or complications of drug-induced liver injury should be pursued.2
Treatment requires identification and discontinuation of the culprit drug
Targeted therapy is appropriate for specific cases (e.g., N-acetylcysteine for acetaminophen toxicity5), but treatment is primarily to stop the offending drug. Glucocorticoids are not routinely recommended, although they may have a role in patients with features of hypersensitivity reactions and multiorgan involvement, or if autoimmune hepatitis is an ongoing concern.2 Liver transplantation should be considered in severe cases.
Footnotes
Competing interests: None declared.
This article has been peer reviewed.
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