- Cirrhosis is a widely prevalent disease that leads to immunosuppression and a higher prevalence of TB than in the general population
- However, treatment in patients with underlying cirrhosis is complicated by poor tolerance, higher incidence of hepatotoxicity, no consensus regarding monitoring and treatment regimens, and higher chances of multidrug-resistant (MDR) TB
Disseminated Liver TB
- The liver is frequently involved in disseminated TB.
- Signs and symptoms include diffuse abdominal pain or pain localizing to the right upper quadrant, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea
- Histopathologic sections of involved liver demonstrate scattered granulomatous lesions that on gross examination have the appearance of millet seeds
- Liver function test abnormalities are common, including elevated alkaline phosphatase and transaminases in 83 and 42 percent of patients, respectively, in one series
- Cholestatic jaundice is also well documented in miliary TB.
Choice of Drugs
- There is no consensus regarding the use of antitubercular drugs in patients with cirrhosis and the potential hepatotoxicity of antitubercular drugs is a major concern
- In the setting of pre-existing liver disease, the likelihood of developing drug-induced hepatitis may be higher.
- Outcome of drug-induced hepatitis in patients with compromised liver function may be poor.
- Monitoring of drug-induced hepatitis may be confounded in the presence of underlying liver disease due to fluctuating liver function tests related to the pre-existing liver disease
Isoniazide
- A meta-analysis of six studies estimated the rate of clinical hepatitis in patients given isoniazid alone to be 0.6%
- Hepatotoxicity due to isoniazid therapy seems to be idiosyncratic in most patients and does not recur with rechallenge, hence, it can be reintroduced after complete clinical recovery
Rifampicin
- Transient elevation of hepatitis enzymes are however routinely observed in these patients
- Conjugated hyperbilirubinemia probably results from rifampicin inhibiting the major bile salt exporter pump, impeding secretion of conjugated bilirubin at the canalicular level
Pyrazinamide
- was considered the most hepatotoxic antitubercular drug.
- When the drug was first introduced in the 1950s, a high incidence of hepatotoxicity was reported and was related to the high dosage of 40-70 mg/kg used at that time.
- Toxicity is rare when pyrazinamide is used at a daily dose of < 35 mg/kg
Ethambutol
- Hepatotoxic effects of this agent are not clinically significant
TB in Compensated Cirrhosis
- have more treatment options and better tolerability
- has been no study to date comparing the full antitubercular therapy course with regimens containing only two potentially hepatotoxic drugs.
- At currently used doses, pyrazinamide has not been shown to be more hepatotoxic as compared to isoniazid or rifampicin
- Pyrazinamide is generally substituted with a fluoroquinolone or an aminoglycoside as per the clinician preference.
- It is prudent to use only two hepatotoxic drugs in treating compensated cirrhosis until a randomized controlled trial (RCT) proves the safety of low-dose pyrazinamide-containing combinations of three potentially hepatotoxic drugs
- Proposed regimen
- rifampicin, isoniazid, pyrazinamide and ethambutol for 2 mo followed by 4 mo rifampicin and isoniazid
- rifampicin, isoniazid, fluoroquinolone/aminoglycoside and ethambutol for 2 mo followed by 4 mo rifampicin and isoniazid
- rifampicin, isoniazid, and ethambutol for 2 mo followed by 7 mo rifampicin and isoniazid.
Decompensated Cirrhosis
Child’s status
|
Treatment
|
A
|
Two hepatotoxic
drugs can be used namely isoniazid and rifampicin with/without pyrazinamide
(low dose). Duration 6-9 mo
|
B
|
Ideally
one hepatotoxic drug is used in combination. Pyrazinamide generally avoided
Duration generally 9-12 mo
|
C
|
No hepatotoxic
drugs to be used. Can use second-line drugs like streptomycin, ethambutol,
fluoroquinolones, amikacin, kanamycin for extended duration of 12 mo or more.
Role of aminoglycosides may be limited due to reduced renal reserve in these
patients
|
References:
- www.uptodate.com
- Antitubercular therapy in patients with cirrhosis: Challenges and options. World J Gastroenterol. 2014 May 21; 20(19): 5760–5772.
- A Guide to the Management of Tuberculosis in Patients with Chronic Liver Disease. J Clin Exp Hepatol. 2012 Sep; 2(3): 260–270.
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