Antituberculosis therapy–induced acute liver failure: Magnitude, profile, prognosis, and predictors of outcome
✍ Scribed by Ramesh Kumar; Shalimar; Vikram Bhatia; Shankar Khanal; V. Sreenivas; S. Datta Gupta; Subrat K. Panda; Subrat K. Acharya
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 259 KB
- Volume
- 51
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0270-9139
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✦ Synopsis
Antituberculosis therapy (ATT)-associated acute liver failure (ATT-ALF) is the commonest drug-induced ALF in South Asia. Prospective studies on ATT-ALF are lacking. The current study prospectively evaluated the magnitude, clinical course, outcome, and prognostic factors in ATT-ALF. From January 1986 to January 2009, 1223 consecutive ALF patients were evaluated: ATT alone was the cause in 70 (5.7%) patients. Another 15 (1.2%) had ATT and simultaneous hepatitis virus infection. In 44 (62.8%) patients, ATT was prescribed empirically without definitive evidence of tuberculosis. ATT-ALF patients were younger (32.87 [+/-15.8] years), and 49 (70%) of them were women. Most had hyperacute presentation; the median icterus encephalopathy interval was 4.5 (0-30) days. The median duration of ATT before ALF was 30 (7-350) days. At presentation, advanced encephalopathy and cerebral edema were present in 51 (76%) and 29 (41.4%) patients, respectively. Gastrointestinal bleed, seizures, infection, and acute renal failure were documented in seven (10%), five (7.1%), 26 (37.1%), and seven (10%) patients, respectively. Compared with hepatitis E virus (HEV) and non-A non-E-induced ALF, ATT-ALF patients had nearly similar presentations except for older age and less elevation of liver enzymes. The mortality rate among patients with ATT-ALF was high (67.1%, n = 47), and only 23 (32.9%) patients recovered with medical treatment. In multivariate analysis, three factors independently predicted mortality: serum bilirubin (>or=10.8 mg/dL), prothrombin time (PT) prolongation (>or=26 seconds), and grade III/IV encephalopathy at presentation.
Conclusion:
Att-alf constituted 5.7% of alf at our center and had a high mortality rate. because the mortality rate is so high, determining which factors are predictors is less important. a high proportion of patients had consumed att empirically, which could have been prevented.
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