Author
Africa Borras
Bio: Africa Borras is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hy's law & Transplantation. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 751 citations.
Topics: Hy's law, Transplantation
Papers
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TL;DR: Patients with drug-induced hepatocellular jaundice have 11.7% chance of progressing to death or transplantation, and amoxicillin-clavulanate stands out as the most common drug related to DILI.
811 citations
Cited by
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TL;DR: The clinical care for patients with cholestatic liver diseases has advanced considerably during recent decades thanks to growing insight into pathophysiological mechanisms and remarkable methodological and technical developments in diagnostic procedures as well as therapeutic and preventive approaches.
1,405 citations
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TL;DR: To survey the burden of liver disease in Europe and its causes 260 epidemiological studies published in the last five years were reviewed and found each of these four major causes is amenable to prevention and treatment.
1,052 citations
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TL;DR: Clinical guidance is provided with regard to the detection, evaluation, and possible prevention of drug-related hepatotoxicity in patients exposed to hepatotoxic effects of new medication.
Abstract: Given its rarity, drug-related hepatotoxicity may not be seen during the initial clinical trials of a new medication. After approval, when many more patients are exposed, toxic effects that are very infrequent may emerge. This review explains the difficulties in identifying the cause of hepatotoxic effects in such situations and provides clinical guidance with regard to the detection, evaluation, and possible prevention of drug-related hepatotoxicity.
944 citations
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TL;DR: The current understanding of the pathophysiology of experimental drug hepatotoxicity is examined, focusing on acetaminophen, particularly with respect to the role of the innate immune system and control of cell-death pathways, which might provide targets for exploration and identification of risk factors and mechanisms in humans.
Abstract: The occurrence of idiosyncratic drug hepatotoxicity is a major problem in all phases of clinical drug development and the most frequent cause of post-marketing warnings and withdrawals This review examines the clinical signatures of this problem, signals predictive of its occurrence (particularly of more frequent, reversible, low-grade injury) and the role of monitoring in prevention by examining several recent examples (for example, troglitazone) In addition, the failure of preclinical toxicology to predict idiosyncratic reactions, and what can be done to improve this problem, is discussed Finally, our current understanding of the pathophysiology of experimental drug hepatotoxicity is examined, focusing on acetaminophen, particularly with respect to the role of the innate immune system and control of cell-death pathways, which might provide targets for exploration and identification of risk factors and mechanisms in humans
926 citations
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TL;DR: This report summarizes the causes, clinical features, and outcomes from the first 300 patients enrolled in a prospective study to recruit patients with suspected idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury and create a repository of biological samples for analysis.
775 citations