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Liver Injury in HIV-positive Patients on Antituberculosis and/or Antiretroviral Therapy – Assessing Causality

Background We compared performance of the Roussel Uclaf Causality Assessment Method (RUCAM) with multidisciplinary expert panel review in identifying a drug-induced liver injury (DILI) due to antituberculosis therapy (ATT) and/or antiretroviral therapy (ART). Methods Cases were drawn from a prospect...

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Main Author: Gunter, Hannah May
Other Authors: Cohen, Karen
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Medicine 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Gunter, Hannah May
author2 Cohen, Karen
author_browse Cohen, Karen
Gunter, Hannah May
author_facet Cohen, Karen
Gunter, Hannah May
author_sort Gunter, Hannah May
collection Thesis
description Background We compared performance of the Roussel Uclaf Causality Assessment Method (RUCAM) with multidisciplinary expert panel review in identifying a drug-induced liver injury (DILI) due to antituberculosis therapy (ATT) and/or antiretroviral therapy (ART). Methods Cases were drawn from a prospective registry of hospitalised adults with suspected DILI due to ATT and/or ART in Cape Town, South Africa. Participants had to fulfil American Thoracic Society criteria for ATT interruption (alanine transaminase [ALT]≥5 times upper limit of normal [ULN]/ALT≥3 times [ULN] and symptomatic). Causality assessment by expert panel review served as reference standard. The panel ranked potentially implicated drugs as certain, probable, possible, or unlikely causes guided by World Health Organization Uppsala Monitoring Centre criteria. The RUCAM was performed for each potentially implicated drug. We calculated sensitivity and specificity of the RUCAM in identifying a probable/certain drug cause for liver injury. Results We included 48 participants. All were HIV-positive. Twenty-seven were on concomitant ART and ATT, with a median of 6 potentially hepatotoxic drugs per case. Sensitivity and specificity of the RUCAM in identifying a probable/certain drug cause of liver injury compared with expert panel review was 11% and 85% respectively. Implicated drugs (times ranked probable/certain by panel) were isoniazid (18/0), pyrazinamide (17/0), rifampicin (15/1), efavirenz (6/4), lopinavir/ritonavir (1/0). Conclusions HIV-positive patients with liver injury received multiple potentially implicated drugs, which may increase liver injury risk and complicates causality assessment. Compared with expert panel review, the RUCAM had low sensitivity in detecting probable or certain drug causes of liver injury.
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language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/36963 Liver Injury in HIV-positive Patients on Antituberculosis and/or Antiretroviral Therapy – Assessing Causality Gunter, Hannah May Cohen, Karen Clinical Pharmacology Background We compared performance of the Roussel Uclaf Causality Assessment Method (RUCAM) with multidisciplinary expert panel review in identifying a drug-induced liver injury (DILI) due to antituberculosis therapy (ATT) and/or antiretroviral therapy (ART). Methods Cases were drawn from a prospective registry of hospitalised adults with suspected DILI due to ATT and/or ART in Cape Town, South Africa. Participants had to fulfil American Thoracic Society criteria for ATT interruption (alanine transaminase [ALT]≥5 times upper limit of normal [ULN]/ALT≥3 times [ULN] and symptomatic). Causality assessment by expert panel review served as reference standard. The panel ranked potentially implicated drugs as certain, probable, possible, or unlikely causes guided by World Health Organization Uppsala Monitoring Centre criteria. The RUCAM was performed for each potentially implicated drug. We calculated sensitivity and specificity of the RUCAM in identifying a probable/certain drug cause for liver injury. Results We included 48 participants. All were HIV-positive. Twenty-seven were on concomitant ART and ATT, with a median of 6 potentially hepatotoxic drugs per case. Sensitivity and specificity of the RUCAM in identifying a probable/certain drug cause of liver injury compared with expert panel review was 11% and 85% respectively. Implicated drugs (times ranked probable/certain by panel) were isoniazid (18/0), pyrazinamide (17/0), rifampicin (15/1), efavirenz (6/4), lopinavir/ritonavir (1/0). Conclusions HIV-positive patients with liver injury received multiple potentially implicated drugs, which may increase liver injury risk and complicates causality assessment. Compared with expert panel review, the RUCAM had low sensitivity in detecting probable or certain drug causes of liver injury. 2023-02-22T08:25:36Z 2023-02-22T08:25:36Z 2022 2023-02-20T12:50:24Z Master Thesis Masters MMed http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36963 eng application/pdf Department of Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Clinical Pharmacology
Gunter, Hannah May
Liver Injury in HIV-positive Patients on Antituberculosis and/or Antiretroviral Therapy – Assessing Causality
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Liver Injury in HIV-positive Patients on Antituberculosis and/or Antiretroviral Therapy – Assessing Causality
title_full Liver Injury in HIV-positive Patients on Antituberculosis and/or Antiretroviral Therapy – Assessing Causality
title_fullStr Liver Injury in HIV-positive Patients on Antituberculosis and/or Antiretroviral Therapy – Assessing Causality
title_full_unstemmed Liver Injury in HIV-positive Patients on Antituberculosis and/or Antiretroviral Therapy – Assessing Causality
title_short Liver Injury in HIV-positive Patients on Antituberculosis and/or Antiretroviral Therapy – Assessing Causality
title_sort liver injury in hiv positive patients on antituberculosis and or antiretroviral therapy assessing causality
topic Clinical Pharmacology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36963
work_keys_str_mv AT gunterhannahmay liverinjuryinhivpositivepatientsonantituberculosisandorantiretroviraltherapyassessingcausality