Publications by authors named "Inmaculada Medina-Caliz"

Article Synopsis
  • A comprehensive study analyzed 468 cases of idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury (DILI) in Latin America over a decade, revealing key demographic details such as a predominance of women (62%) and a mean age of 49 years.
  • The analysis found that hepatocellular injury was the most common (62%), with significant occurrences of jaundice (60%) and hospitalization (42%), while 4.1% of cases resulted in fatal outcomes.
  • The study highlights a rising incidence of liver injuries linked to herbal and dietary supplements, as well as specific drugs like nimesulide and nitrofurantoin, suggesting the need for public health initiatives to educate on the risks associated with these medications.
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The impact of prior drug allergies (PDA) on the clinical features and outcomes of patients who develop idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is largely unknown. We aimed to assess the clinical presentation and outcomes of DILI patients based on the presence or absence of PDA and explore the association between culprit drugs responsible for DILI and allergy. We analysed a well-vetted cohort of DILI cases enrolled from the Spanish DILI Registry.

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Article Synopsis
  • Idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury (DILI) with DRESS is less understood in Western countries, but a study identified 53 cases from Spanish and Latin American registries to analyze their clinical characteristics and outcomes.
  • Patients with DILI-DRESS were generally younger and exhibited more frequent cholestatic or mixed liver damage compared to a larger group of DILI patients, with only one case progressing to acute liver failure and resulting in death.
  • The study found that certain medications, particularly anti-epileptics like carbamazepine and lamotrigine, were more commonly associated with DILI-DRESS, and higher bilirubin levels and lack of eosinophilia were linked to worse health outcomes.
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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 reported, 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.

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Background: The use of corticosteroids to treat patients with idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury (DILI) relies on empirical clinical decisions.

Aim: To investigate the relationship between corticosteroids and risk of acute liver failure (ALF) in patients with DILI and to assess if corticosteroid therapy was associated with improved outcomes in DILI patients.

Methods: We analysed bona fide idiosyncratic DILI cases from the Spanish DILI Registry and Indiana University School of Medicine.

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Nitrofurantoin is a synthetic antibiotic that is recommended as first-choice treatment for uncomplicated urinary tract infections. The prescription of this drug has increased dramatically, especially in Latin American countries. We described the demographics, clinical characteristics, biochemical features, and outcome of nitrofurantoin-induced liver injury.

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Introduction: Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is a rare but serious adverse event that can progress to acute liver failure (ALF). The evidence for treatment of DILI in children is scarce.

Objective: We aimed to comprehensively review the available literature on the therapies for both acetaminophen overdose (APAP) and idiosyncratic DILI in the paediatric population.

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Article Synopsis
  • Nitrofurantoin, minocycline, methyldopa, and infliximab are identified as key drugs that can cause autoimmune-like hepatitis (DI-AILH), while evidence for other drugs and dietary supplements is less clear.
  • The study aimed to create criteria for diagnosing DI-AILH by defining specific characteristics and reviewing existing case reports, which included 186 instances mainly involving conventional medications.
  • Findings showed that drugs like interferons, statins, and adalimumab are also linked to DI-AILH, with Tinospora cordifolia and Khat being the only herbal supplements mentioned, and long-term immunosuppression is rarely needed for patients impacted by these drugs.
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Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) encompasses the unexpected damage that drugs can cause to the liver. DILI may develop in the context of an immunoallergic syndrome with cutaneous manifestations, which are sometimes severe (SCARs). Nevirapine, allopurinol, anti-epileptics, sulfonamides, and antibiotics are the most frequent culprit drugs for DILI associated with SCARs.

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Nimesulide is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug still marketed in many countries. We aim to analyze the clinical phenotype, outcome, and histological features of nimesulide-induced liver injury (nimesulide-DILI). We analyzed 57 cases recruited from the Spanish and Latin American DILI registries.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study analyzed data from 843 patients with drug-induced liver injury (DILI) in Spain over 20 years to understand the clinical features and outcomes of DILI cases.
  • Findings indicated that younger age and lower platelet counts were associated with hepatocellular injury, with anti-infectives being the most common drugs involved.
  • The research highlighted that elevated aspartate aminotransferase (AST) levels at onset are significant predictors of poor outcomes, particularly in older patients and those with existing liver conditions.
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Background: Herbal and dietary supplements (HDS) consumption, a growing cause of hepatotoxicity, is a common practice among Latin-American populations.

Objectives: To evaluate clinical, laboratory features and outcome in HDS-hepatotoxicity included in the Latin America-Drug Induced Liver Injury (LATINDILI) Network.

Methods: A total of 29 adjudicated cases of HDS hepatotoxicity reported to the LATINDILI Network from October 2011 through December 2019 were compared with 322 DILI cases due to conventional drugs and 16 due to anabolic steroids as well as with other series of HDS-hepatotoxicity.

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Older patients with hepatotoxicity have been scarcely studied in idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury (DILI) cohorts. We sought the distinctive characteristics of DILI in older patients across age groups. A total of 882 DILI patients included in the Spanish DILI Registry (33% ≥ 65 years) were categorized according to age: "young" (< 65 years); "young-old" (65-74 years); "middle-old" (75-84 years); and "oldest-old" (≥ 85 years).

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Article Synopsis
  • This study investigates the prevalence and impact of Hepatitis E virus (HEV) in patients initially thought to have drug-induced liver injury (DILI) in Spain.
  • Researchers analyzed 265 patients with suspected DILI and 108 control subjects, finding 8% of patients tested positive for acute HEV infections and a 35% overall seroprevalence of anti-HEV antibodies.
  • The findings suggest that active HEV infection should be evaluated in suspected DILI cases, especially for those with pre-existing liver conditions and significantly elevated liver enzymes.
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Hepatotoxicity related to HDS is a growing global health issue. We have undertaken a systematic review of published case reports and case series from LA from 1976 to 2020 to describe the clinical features of HDS related hepatotoxicity in this region. We search in PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus and specific LA databases according to PRISMA guidelines.

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Idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury (DILI) occasionally occurs in the setting of severe cutaneous adverse reactions (SCARs), including Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS), toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) and drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (DRESS). This strengthens the proposed immunologic mechanism associated with this adverse reaction. DRESS exhibits the most common association with DILI.

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Background And Objectives: Corticosteroids are often empirically used to treat idiosyncratic hepatotoxicity with severe features. Interestingly, intravenous methylprednisolone (MP) is increasingly being recognized as being responsible for liver injury. We aimed to characterize MP-induced liver injury by analyzing demographical, clinical, laboratory and outcome data of three MP-induced hepatotoxicity cases and compared this information with that of previously published cases.

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Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is the leading cause of acute liver failure (ALF) in developed countries. The extremely variable phenotype of DILI, both in presentation and in severity, is one of the distinctive characteristics of the disease and one of the major challenges that hepatologists face when assessing hepatotoxicity cases. A new Hy's law that more accurately predicts the risk of ALF related to DILI has been proposed and validated.

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Background & Aims: Most patients with drug-induced liver injury (DILI) manifest clinical symptoms while on therapy, while some patients manifest days or weeks after drug cessation (delayed onset). This challenges DILI causality assessment and diagnosis. Factors contributing to the delayed onset phenotype are currently unknown.

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The rising burden of herbal and dietary supplement hepatotoxicity (HILI) is a growing concern in Western countries. The estimated incidence of HILI in well-designed prospective studies ranges from less than 1 to 3 individuals per 100,000 inhabitants/year. Herbal hepatotoxicity has a particular signature encompassing female predominance, hepatocellular type of damage with markedly elevated transaminases on presentation, more common unintentional rechallenge, and a greater risk of death/liver transplantation.

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Background & Aims: There have been increasing reports of liver injury associated with use of herbal and dietary supplements, likely due to easy access to these products and beliefs among consumers that they are safer or more effective than conventional medications. We aimed to evaluate clinical features and outcomes of patients with herbal and dietary supplement-induced liver injuries included in the Spanish DILI Registry.

Methods: We collected and analyzed data on demographic and clinical features, along with biochemical parameters, of 32 patients with herbal and dietary supplement-associated liver injury reported to the Spanish DILI registry from 1994 through 2016.

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