P1: RLJ/OZN P2: KUF
0521779407-D-01 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 13, 2007 7:41
Drug and Toxin-Induced Liver Diseases 501
about 48 hours of well-being and then rising LFTs; FHF in up to 30%;
renal failure in up to 20%
■nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory (NSAIDS): mild to severe; usually
idiosyncratic
■antibiotics: usually self-limited and idiosyncratic: carbenicillin
(necroinflammatory), oxacillin (cholestatic), Augmentin (chol-
estatic) ceftriaxone (biliary sludge), erythromycin (cholestasis), sul-
fonamide (mixed)
■antifungals: ketoconazole, fluconazole (necroinflammatory): mild
to fulminant
■antituberculous agents: isoniazid (INH): jaundice in 1% of all
patients; affects 2% of patients older than 50; female and alcoholics:
greatest risk; FHF associated with high mortality. Rifampin: rarely
hepatotoxic when taken alone; clinical hepatitis in 5–8% when taken
with INH
■antiviral agents: zidovudine (AZT): sporadic cases of biochemical
hepatitis, can lead to fatal syndrome of hepatomegaly, lactic acidosis,
and steatosis in AIDS patients; didanosine (DDI)
■oral contraceptives: cholestasis, hepatic adenoma, Budd-Chiari
syndrome; HCC and focal nodular hyperplasia
■anabolic, androgenic steroids: cholestasis, hepatic adenoma, HCC
■antilipids: niacin – infrequent injury (cholestatic and hepatocellu-
lar) at doses >3 g/day; mild to FHF; 50–75% dose reduction required
for sustained-release form. HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors – asymp-
tomatic elevated AST and ALT, usually in the first year of therapy
■neurologic/antipsychotic agents: chlorpromazine (cholestasis), car-
bamazepine, phenytoin, valproic acid
■cardiovascular agents: amiodarone (acute liver failure and chronic
hepatitis/steatosis/fibrosis), alpha-methyldopa (chronic hepatitis
to FHF), ACE-inhibitors-captopril (cholestatic), enalapril (hepa-
tocellular), lisinopril (mixed pattern), calcium channel blockers-
verapamil (hepatocellular), diltiazem (cholestatic), nifedipine
(mixed)
■chemotherapeutic/immunosuppressive agents: methotrexate (stea-
tosis, fibrosis, cirrhosis), 5-FU, azathioprine (asymptomatic ele-
vated AST/ALT, cholestasis, peliosis hepatitis, venoocclusive disease,
nodular regenerative hyperplasia), cyclosporine (cholestasis)
■total parenteral nutrition (TPN): steatosis, steatohepatitis,
cholestasis-usually reversible with cessation of TPN
■herbal medicine/remedies: many hepatotoxic, should be part of his-
tory in evaluation of abnormal LFTs