Kampo medicine inducing drug-induced liver injury: A case report and systematic review.

Drug Discov Ther

Department of Hospital Pharmaceutics, School of Pharmacy, Showa University, Tokyo, Japan.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Kampo medicine can lead to severe liver injury, as shown in a case where a 29-year-old woman experienced this after taking Saibokuto, requiring steroid treatment for recovery.
  • A systematic review identified 37 cases of drug-induced liver injury linked to Kampo medicines, with 65.9% specifically associated with the ingredient Scutellariae radix.
  • The findings suggest important liver function monitoring within the first two months of taking Kampo medicines with Scutellariae radix due to the potential for liver damage.

Article Abstract

Kampo medicine, comprising various conventional crude drug products, poses challenges in identifying adverse event causality. We present a case of severe liver injury following the administration of Saibokuto and attempted to identify the likely causative crude drug inducing liver injury through a systematic literature review. A 29-year-old woman developed severe liver injury approximately two months after Saibokuto administration, necessitating steroid pulse therapy for recovery. The literature search was conducted on February 15, 2023 in Japan. Using PubMed and the "Igaku Chuo Zasshi (ICHUSHI) database," two individuals independently selected studies published between January 1997 and February 15, 2023. The search focused on studies involving human subjects, published in either English or Japanese, and specifically investigated Kampo medicines categorized as over-the-counter or prescription drugs suspected as causative agents of drug-induced liver injury (DILI). Studies on health supplements, discontinued Kampo medicines, and autoimmune hepatitis, were excluded. As it is ethically impossible to rechallenge drugs that cause liver injury, this review primarily relied on case report literature. Through the review, 37 cases (men/women: 12/25, including present case) were analyzed, including 32 reports (36 cases) from 3,055 studies that met the inclusion criteria. Notably, 65.9% of cases were associated with Scutellariae radix, with onset occurring within 45 (1-730) days and recovery within 35 (7-184) days. Our case study and literature review underscore a prevalent association between liver injury and Kampo medicines containing Scutellariae radix. Vigilant liver function monitoring, particularly within the first 2 months of administration, is recommended, especially for formulations containing Scutellariae radix.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.5582/ddt.2024.01087DOI Listing

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