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Journal ArticleDOI

Acute Hepatitis E Infection Accounts for Some Cases of Suspected Drug-Induced Liver Injury

TL;DR: HEV infection contributes to a small but important proportion of cases of acute liver injury that are suspected to be drug induced, andSerologic testing for HEV infection should be performed, particularly if clinical features are compatible with acute viral hepatitis.
About: This article is published in Gastroenterology.The article was published on 2011-11-01 and is currently open access. It has received 295 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Hepatitis E & Viral hepatitis.

Summary (4 min read)

Introduction

  • Drug-induced liver injury is the leading cause of acute liver failure and the primary reason for regulatory action leading to failed drug approval, market withdrawal, usage restrictions and warnings to practicing physicians in the United States.
  • The diagnosis is primarily one of exclusion and is made only after elimination of common causes of liver disease, such as alcoholic hepatitis, metabolic and genetic liver diseases, bile duct obstruction, and hepatitis A, B, and C virus infection (HAV, HBV, and HCV).
  • 3 Several recent findings have served to alter this opinion.
  • The aims of the current study were to assess whether acute hepatitis E accounts for some cases of suspected drug-induced liver injury in the United States and whether testing for HEV infection is warranted in the routine evaluation of patients with acute liver disease of unknown cause.

Patient identification and causality analysis

  • The Drug Induced Liver Injury Network consists of multiple (previously 5, and currently 8) U.S. clinical sites and a data coordinating center that have enrolled patients with suspected drug-induced liver injury into a prospective study since 2004.
  • The rationale, design and conduct of the DILIN, as well as a summary of the first 300 enrolled cases have been described.
  • 16, 17 All enrolled cases were subjected to formal causality assessment independently by three investigators, and a final causality score was obtained by consensus.
  • 18 At the same time, a Roussel Uclaf Causality Assessment score 19 was determined and cases were graded for severity using a five-point scale developed by the DILIN.

Serologic and Virologic Testing

  • Serum samples were obtained at the time of enrollment, which might be as long as 6 months after the onset of liver injury, and were stored at -80 degrees Celsius in a central repository.
  • For the current study, serum samples from the first 318 patients enrolled were tested for IgM and IgG anti-HEV using enzyme immunoassays of established sensitivity and specificity.
  • 20, 21 Samples with IgM anti-HEV and those with strongly positive reactions for IgG anti-HEV were further tested for HEV RNA using nested reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) 22 and the PCR products were separated by electrophoresis on ethidium bromide-stained agarose gels, extracted from the gel and directly sequenced to provide the consensus sequence.
  • A BLAST search of GenBank nucleotide sequences was performed to determine HEV genotype.
  • Details of the ELISA assays for anti-HEV and the PCR for HEV RNA are provided in Supplementary Material.

Histological Analysis

  • When available, liver biopsies (n=3) were reviewed by a hepatic pathologist (D.E.K.) who was unaware of the medications implicated and results of HEV testing.
  • Histological features of inflammation, fibrosis, steatosis, cholestasis, vascular injury and other findings were systematically recorded, along with a description of the overall pattern of injury.

Repeat Causality Analysis

  • Cases positive for HEV IgM were subjected to repeat causality analysis by three independent reviewers after the results of HEV serological and RT-PCR testing were available.
  • 18 Cases were also judged using the same scale as to the likelihood that the liver injury was due to acute hepatitis E based upon the clinical, biochemical and histological findings.

Data analysis

  • Pairwise comparisons were performed between the cases with no serological evidence of HEV infection versus patients with evidence of active or recent HEV infection (defined by presence of HEV IgM) and those with distant and resolved HEV infection (defined by presence of IgG without IgM anti-HEV).
  • The Wilcoxon test was used for continuous variables, Fisher's exact test for binary outcomes, and the Pearson chi-squared test for other categorical variables.

IRB approval

  • All details of the DILIN Prospective study were reviewed and approved by the institutional review boards of each clinical site and the data coordinating center.
  • In addition, the protocol for anti-HEV testing was specifically approved by the institutional review board of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases of the intramural program of the National Institutes of Health.

Serological Testing

  • Initial and peak serum bilirubin, alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and alkaline phosphatase levels were similar in the three groups of patients.
  • Furthermore, the three groups did not different in distribution of pattern of serum enzyme elevations, severity scores or causality scores.

Demographic and Clinical Features of IgM anti-HEV Positive Cases

  • Selective demographic and clinical features of the nine IgM anti-HEV positive cases are given in Table 2 , and detailed case summaries of each patient are provided as Supplementary Data.
  • The clinical course was considered severe in three patients who manifested signs of hepatic failure such as elevations in INR > 1.5, ascites or hepatic encephalopathy.
  • Information on exposures to farm animals or raw pork was not specifically sought but none offered such information or gave a history of travel to an endemic area.
  • The patients were geographically diverse and presented at 4 of the 5 DILIN centers including Indiana (n=5), San Francisco (n=2), Connecticut (n=1) and North Carolina (n=1) between 2004 and 2006.

HEV RNA results

  • Four patients with IgM anti-HEV were also reactive for HEV RNA, and all four harbored genotype 3.
  • Sequencing analyses showed that the four were not closely related phylogenetically (data not shown) and therefore were not likely due to a single source or contamination, presenting in different geographic areas (Indiana, San Francisco and North Carolina).
  • The four cases with viremia included both patients with HIV infection.
  • Follow-up serum samples, drawn approximately 6 months after enrollment, were available from four IgM anti-HEV-positive subjects: all had an increase in IgG anti-HEV titer, but IgM anti-HEV had diminished in titer or had become negative, consistent with seroconversion after acute infection.
  • All were also negative for HEV RNA (two were positive on the earlier specimen) (Table 3 ).

Causality Analysis/Re-analysis

  • The initial causality assessment for the nine cases concluded that 4 were highly likely, 3 probably and 2 possibly due to drug-induced liver injury.
  • 21 Thus, most cases were considered compatible with drug-induced liver injury on initial assessment in the absence of anti-HEV results.
  • Even with the information on HEV serology, two cases (implicated medications being allopurinol and telithromycin) were still considered probably due to drug-induced liver injury rather than hepatitis E. Both patients presented late during the course of illness and initial clinical features and laboratory results were not available.
  • The remaining seven cases were considered more likely to be acute hepatitis E than drug-induced liver injury, although four were still considered "possibly" due to the medication.
  • Three cases were considered "definite" acute hepatitis E.

Liver histology of IgM anti-HEV positive cases

  • Liver biopsy tissue was available from three patients.
  • The bile ducts showed mild injury with reactive changes, but without cholestasis.
  • Case 4 developed mild acute liver injury with jaundice after taking ezetimibe for one year and underwent liver biopsy during recovery when serum bilirubin (1.4 mg/dL) and ALT levels (60 U/L) were close to normal.
  • The biopsy (not shown) showed mild steatosis, ballooning and bridging fibrosis with focal copper accumulation consistent with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis which he was thought to have before onset of the acute injury (based upon chronic ALT elevations and obesity).
  • Case 7 developed jaundice and a hepatitis-like syndrome 1.5 years after starting an antiretroviral regimen including nevirapine and on liver biopsy had changes of lobular disarray, spotty hepatocyte necrosis without confluence, marked lobular but scant portal inflammation, mild intrahepatic cholestasis but no bile duct injury, steatosis or fibrosis.

Discussion

  • The accurate diagnosis of drug-induced liver injury is critically important not only for patient care, but also for drug development, as even a single episode of severe liver damage associated with a drug during pre-marketing clinical testing may undermine its subsequent approval and marketing.
  • These findings suggest that the recent acute HEV infection detected by IgM anti-HEV testing did not account for the acute liver injury in all cases and that co-incidental, subclinical hepatitis E may have preceded the acute liver injury caused by the implicated medication.
  • In the remaining five patients the absence of viremia may have been due to the delay between the onset of symptoms and blood sampling for the study, as patients were typically referred by local physicians to the DILIN investigators days or even weeks after initial presentation.
  • The presence of serological evidence of acute hepatitis E should also prompt a search for possible sources of infection, such as foreign travel, exposure to farm animals, consumption of undercooked pork or wild game, and close personal contact with chronically immunosuppressed persons.
  • Finally, these findings underscore the need for sensitive and reliable, commercially available assays for HEV infection in the United States and reexamination of the possible benefit of an HEV vaccine.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
05 Jul 2019-Viruses
TL;DR: There is no approved specific therapy for the treatment of acute or chronic HEV GT-3 or -4 infections but off-label use of ribavirin has been demonstrated to be safe and effective in the majority of patients, however, in approximately 15% of chronically HEV infected patients, cure is not possible.
Abstract: Every year, there are an estimated 20 million hepatitis E virus (HEV) infections worldwide, leading to an estimated 3.3 million symptomatic cases of hepatitis E. HEV is largely circulating in the west and is associated with several hepatic and extrahepatic diseases. HEV Genotype 1 and 2 infections are waterborne and causative for epidemics in the tropics, while genotype 3 and 4 infections are zoonotic diseases and are mainly transmitted by ingestion of undercooked pork in industrialized nations. The clinical course of these infections differs: genotype 1 and 2 infection can cause acute illness and can lead to acute liver failure (ALF) or acute on chronic liver failure (ACLF) with a high mortality rate of 20% in pregnant women. In contrast, the majority of HEV GT-3 and -4 infections have a clinically asymptomatic course and only rarely lead to acute on chronic liver failure in elderly or patients with underlying liver disease. Immunosuppressed individuals infected with genotype 3 or 4 may develop chronic hepatitis E, which then can lead to life-threatening cirrhosis. Furthermore, several extra-hepatic manifestations affecting various organs have been associated with ongoing or previous HEV infections but the causal link for many of them still needs to be proven. There is no approved specific therapy for the treatment of acute or chronic HEV GT-3 or -4 infections but off-label use of ribavirin has been demonstrated to be safe and effective in the majority of patients. However, in approximately 15% of chronically HEV infected patients, cure is not possible.

66 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Primary EBV infection accounts for <1 % of consecutive adult ALF cases but is associated with a high case fatality rate, and LT isassociated with favorable short- and long-term outcomes.
Abstract: Purpose Acute liver failure (ALF) is a rare clinical syndrome associated with a high case fatality rate. Asymptomatic primary infection with Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) is common in the general population while acute hepatitis and jaundice are much less common and ALF has been rarely reported. We reviewed the presenting features as well as clinical outcomes amongst consecutive adults with EBV-related ALF.

65 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is hypothesized that early short‐term treatment of acuteHEV infection may be useful for patients with risk factors or undergoing chemotherapy, and Ribavirin is now the antiviral treatment of choice in solid‐organ‐transplant recipients with chronic HEV infection.
Abstract: Background & aims Hepatitis E virus (HEV) genotypes 3 and 4 cause sporadic cases of infection in developed countries. Being elderly and having an underlying liver disease are the main risk factors for death in this population. Chronic infection has been described in immunocompromised patients. Ribavirin is now the antiviral treatment of choice in solid-organ-transplant recipients with chronic HEV infection. We hypothesized that early short-term treatment of acute HEV infection may be useful for patients with risk factors or undergoing chemotherapy. Methods Between July 2010 and January 2014, 21 patients diagnosed with acute HEV infection were treated with ribavirin, at 600-800 mg/day for up to 3 months. All serum samples were positive for HEV RNA. Results Nine patients were treated for severe hepatitis. Six patients were aged >70 years. Four patients were receiving an immunosuppressive therapy for an autoimmune disease and two patients were undergoing chemotherapy for a malignancy. Two patients received a fixed-dose regimen. For all other patients, ribavirin was stopped when HEV became undetectable in the serum. The median duration of ribavirin treatment was 26 days. Two patients developed severe anaemia. Two patients with encephalopathy died. One patient relapsed transiently. All patients were cleared of HEV and regained normalized liver-enzyme levels. Immunosuppressive treatment and chemotherapy could be resumed. Conclusions Treatment of acute HEV infection using ribavirin seems safe and effective. Short-term treatment tailored to viraemia may be the best regimen for this indication.

63 citations


Cites background from "Acute Hepatitis E Infection Account..."

  • ...Ribavirin could be an effective therapeutic option for patients with acute HEV infection in specific situations: (1) older patients, (2) patients with underlying liver disease, (3) patients undergoing chemotherapy or (4) those receiving immunosuppressive treatments for an autoimmune disease....

    [...]

  • ...It arises most frequently in older adults, particularly men, and therefore has been mistaken for drug-induced hepatitis (3, 4)....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There is an urgent need for novel antiviral compounds that are safe and effective particularly for patients having contraindications for ribavirin or interferon-alpha and infected by the ribaviral-resistant HEV.
Abstract: The hepatitis E virus (HEV) is the fifth known form of viral hepatitis and was first recognized as the cause of an epidemic of unexplained acute hepatitis in the early 1980s. Globally, it is one of the most frequent causes of acute viral hepatitis. The majority of HEV infections are asymptomatic and lead to the spontaneous clearance of the virus. Among the eight different genotypes identified to date, HEV genotype 1 (HEV1), HEV2, HEV3, and HEV4 are the most frequent genotypes causing infections in humans. HEV1 and HEV2 are prevalent in developing regions and able to result in large-scale outbreaks originating from contaminated water supplies. They are also responsible for severe hepatitis in pregnant patients and infants. In contrast, HEV3 and HEV4 are zoonotic, and the transmission of these genotypes to humans occurs mainly through the fecal contamination of water and consumption of contaminated meat from infected animals. Their main reservoir is the pig, and they are mostly encountered in developed countries. The major risk groups for HEV infection and its ensuing adverse consequences are pregnant women, infants, older people, immunocompromised individuals, patients with underlying chronic liver diseases, and workers that come into close contact with HEV-infected animals. In the clinical perspective, HEV infections have diverse clinical manifestations including acute and self-limiting hepatitis, acute-on-chronic liver disease, chronic hepatitis, cirrhosis, and liver failure. Although HEV mainly results in acute self-limiting infection, chronic HEV infection may occur among immunocompromised patients (e.g., solid-organ transplant recipients). Additionally, HEV-associated extrahepatic manifestations involving various organs have been reported in the last decade, although the causal link for many of them still needs to be proven. Ribavirin and interferon-alpha are the most widely used agents for the treatment of HEV infections with a certain level of success. However, ribavirin is contraindicated in pregnant patients, and interferon-alpha cannot be used in most transplant recipients. Therefore, there is an urgent need for novel antiviral compounds that are safe and effective particularly for patients having contraindications for ribavirin or interferon-alpha and infected by the ribavirin-resistant HEV. In this review article, a literature search using PubMed and MEDLINE databases was performed, up to March 2020. Only the articles published in English were reviewed.

61 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There are no objective tests to definitively diagnose DILI and the diagnosis depends on thorough and accurate history taking, follow-up of the patient's clinical course and excluding more common causes of liver injury.
Abstract: Patients with idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury (DILI) can pose substantial diagnostic, prognostic, and therapeutic challenges to the practicing gastroenterologist. The presentation of DILI may vary from asymptomatic liver enzyme elevation to acute liver failure. Although most DILI resolves following drug discontinuation, up to 20% of patients progress to chronic DILI further challenging the clinicians diagnostic and management skills. Also, some medications can lead to advanced fibrosis, encephalopathy, and portal hypertension without significant elevation in liver enzymes during exposure. Finally, there are no objective tests to definitively diagnose DILI. Although causality assessment instruments are available, none are widely accepted or used in clinical practice. Therefore, the diagnosis of DILI depends on thorough and accurate history taking, follow-up of the patient's clinical course and excluding more common causes of liver injury. In this review, we discuss the variable clinical presentations, course, and diagnostic methods used to establish a diagnosis and prognosis in DILI.

61 citations

References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a new method for drug causality assessment is described and applied to reports of acute liver injuries, using reports with positive rechallenge as external standard.

1,291 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The time from transplantation to diagnosis was significantly shorter and the total counts of lymphocytes and of CD2, CD3, and CD4 T cells were significantly lower in patients in whom chronic disease developed.
Abstract: Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is considered an agent responsible for acute hepatitis that does not progress to chronic hepatitis. We identified 14 cases of acute HEV infection in three patients receiving liver transplants, nine receiving kidney transplants, and two receiving kidney and pancreas transplants. All patients were positive for serum HEV RNA. Chronic hepatitis developed in eight patients, as confirmed by persistently elevated aminotransferase levels, serum HEV RNA, and histologic features of chronic hepatitis. The time from transplantation to diagnosis was significantly shorter and the total counts of lymphocytes and of CD2, CD3, and CD4 T cells were significantly lower in patients in whom chronic disease developed.

1,139 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The discovery of swine HEV not only has implications for HEV vaccine development, diagnosis, and biology, but also raises a potential public health concern for zoonosis or xenozoonosis following xenotransplantation with pig organs.
Abstract: A novel virus, designated swine hepatitis E virus (swine HEV), was identified in pigs. Swine HEV crossreacts with antibody to the human HEV capsid antigen. Swine HEV is a ubiquitous agent and the majority of swine ≥3 months of age in herds from the midwestern United States were seropositive. Young pigs naturally infected by swine HEV were clinically normal but had microscopic evidence of hepatitis, and developed viremia prior to seroconversion. The entire ORFs 2 and 3 were amplified by reverse transcription–PCR from sera of naturally infected pigs. The putative capsid gene (ORF2) of swine HEV shared about 79–80% sequence identity at the nucleotide level and 90–92% identity at the amino acid level with human HEV strains. The small ORF3 of swine HEV had 83–85% nucleotide sequence identity and 77–82% amino acid identity with human HEV strains. Phylogenetic analyses showed that swine HEV is closely related to, but distinct from, human HEV strains. The discovery of swine HEV not only has implications for HEV vaccine development, diagnosis, and biology, but also raises a potential public health concern for zoonosis or xenozoonosis following xenotransplantation with pig organs.

1,088 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Hepatitis E virus is an enterically transmitted virus that causes both epidemics and sporadic cases of acute hepatitis in many countries of Asia and Africa but only rarely causes disease in more industrialised countries.
Abstract: Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is a positive-stranded RNA virus with a 7.2 kb genome that is capped and polyadenylated. The virus is currently unclassified: the organisation of the genome resembles that of the Caliciviridae but sequence analyses suggest it is more closely related to the Togaviridae. Hepatitis E virus is an enterically transmitted virus that causes both epidemics and sporadic cases of acute hepatitis in many countries of Asia and Africa but only rarely causes disease in more industrialised countries. Initially the virus was believed to have a limited geographical distribution. However, serological studies suggest that HEV may be endemic also in the United States and Europe even though it infrequently causes overt disease in these countries. Many different animal species worldwide recently have been shown to have antibodies to HEV suggesting that hepatitis E may be zoonotic. Although two related strains have been experimentally transmitted between species, direct transmission from an animal to a human has not been documented. There are four currently recognised genotypes and two of the four contain viruses isolated from swine as well as from humans. Regardless of country of origin or genotype of the virus, most, if not all, strains belong to a single serotype. A promising recombinant vaccine candidate comprised of a truncated capsid protein is currently under evaluation in Nepal.

799 citations


Additional excerpts

  • ...31 4 (10) 40 (15) 5 (12) 25 (10) 4 (10) 9 (3)...

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Journal ArticleDOI
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

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