The landscape of hepatobiliary adverse reactions across 53 herbal and dietary supplements reveals immune-mediated injury as a common cause of hepatitis.

Arch Toxicol

Division of Bioinformatics and Biostatistics, National Center for Toxicological Research, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, 3900 NCTR Road, Jefferson, AR, 72079, USA.

Published: January 2020

Recent evidence suggests herbal-induced liver injury (HILI) to account for 20% of cases among the U.S. Drug-Induced-Liver-Injury-Network. To define injury patterns of HILI, we reviewed the clinical data of 413 patients exposed to 53 HDS products by considering the evidence for HILI and its grades of severity. Outstandingly, females developed HILI more rapidly (p = 0.018) and the time to recovery was significantly increased (p = 0.0153). > 90% of reported cases were severe and half of HDS products caused acute liver failure (ALF) requiring liver transplantation or resulted in fatal outcomes. Liver biopsies of 243 patients defined 13 histological features; two-thirds of products elicited immune-mediated hepatitis and included 154 Hy's law positive cases. The histological injury patterns were confirmed among unrelated patients, while accidental re-challenges evidenced culprits as causative. Furthermore, one-fifth of patients presented elevated autoantibody titres indicative of autoimmune-like HILI, and one-third of the products were linked to chronic hepatitis and cholestatic injuries not resolving within 6 months. Lastly, INR and TBL are critical laboratory parameters to predict progression of severe HILI to ALF. Our study highlights the need for a regulatory framework to minimize the risk for HILI. Better education of the public and a physician-supervised self-medication plan will be important measures to abate risk of HILI.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00204-019-02621-4DOI Listing

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