http://askdis.blogspot.com/2016/11/analgesics-used-in-hepatic-failure.html
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Analgesia
: In Hepatic Failure
Paracetamol
§
In
general, for long-term use in cirrhotic patients it is recommended to reduce
dosing at 2 to 3 g/d.
§
Although such patients may eliminate
paracetamol more slowly than patients without liver disease, repeated
administration of the drug does not result in accumulation of hepatotoxic
intermediate, NAPQI.
§
Furthermore, there is no evidence of increased
CYP enzymes activity or reduced hepatocellular glutathione stores in patients
with liver disease.
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Can paracetamol (acetaminophen) be administered to patients with
liver impairment? [Hayward et al 2016]
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4833155/#!po=20.3704
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Nevertheless, the conservative recommendations that followed the
publication of the Watkins et al. 62 paper made by leading bodies of ‘at
risk’ populations persist. For
example, the American Liver Foundation recommended patients not exceed 3 g of
paracetamol daily and the American Geriatric Society suggested no more than
2−3 g daily in older patients with hepatic insufficiency or a history of
alcohol abuse. McNeil Laboratories self‐initiated
packaging changes to recommend a 3 g daily maximum on their Tylenol products,
and the FDA's pursuit to discourage prescribers from recommending products that
contain more than 325 mg paracetamol per dosage unit is ongoing. It must be
noted that these generalized
recommendations may not be applicable to all patients, and sub‐therapeutic dosing may accelerate
progression to stronger analgesics.
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The Therapeutic Use of Analgesics in Patients With Liver Cirrhosis: A
Literature Review and Evidence-Based Recommendations [Imani et al 2014]
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Paracetamol
is safe in patients with chronic liver disease but a reduced dose of 2-3 g/d
is recommended for long-term use. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
(NSAIDs) are best avoided because of risk of renal impairment, hepatorenal
syndrome, and gastrointestinal hemorrhage. Most opioids can have deleterious
effects in patients with cirrhosis. They have an increased risk of toxicity
and hepatic encephalopathy. They should be administrated with lower and less
frequent dosing in these patients and be avoided in patients with a history
of encephalopathy or addiction to any substance.
Despite renal disease, in which the glomerular filtration rate is the
metric used to guide dose adjustment, there is no reliable marker for liver
disease severity and hepatic clearance that can be used as a guide for drug
dosing. Though various tests like liver function test, indocyanine green
clearance, megaxx, Child Pugh score, and MELD score are used for prediction
of impaired liver function, they all lack the sensitivity to quantitate the
specific ability of the liver to metabolize individual drugs. Thus the
usefulness of these measures for dose adjustment purposes is imprecise.
As a general rule, in patients with
well-compensated cirrhosis and near-normal liver synthetic function (normal
hepatic synthetic function, normal serum albumin, clotting factors and
bilirubin), drug pharmacokinetics are unchanged or modified only to a small
extent as compared to patients with decompensated cirrhosis with portal
hypertension and significant synthetic dysfunction
Paracetamol is commonly used as a first choice analgesic for
different nociceptive acute or chronic pain and remains one of the safest
available analgesics. However, the use of this drug in patients with hepatic
disease is often avoided. This perception arose from awareness of hepatotoxic
effect of paracetamol overdose and a lack of understanding its metabolic
pathway in patients with liver disease. It is known that the majority of
paracetamol is metabolized via the sulfation and glucuronidation pathways
into nontoxic products which are then excreted via the urine. However, a
small proportion (< 5%) is oxidized via CYP system, mostly CYP2E1, to a
hepatotoxic intermediate, N-acetyl-p-benzoquinone imine (NAPQI), which is
readily rendered nontoxic by conjugation to glutathione . Pharmacokinetic
studies have indicated an increase in the elimination half-life (t ½) of
paracetamol in patients with liver cirrhosis compared with healthy controls.
Meanwhile, the plasma clearance of the drug was shown to be reduced in these
patients (18-20). However, the t ½ of the drug or its plasma clearance has
been found to be correlated with prothrombin time as well as the plasma
albumin levels.
The theoretical mechanisms of paracetamol-induced hepatotoxicity in
chronic cirrhotic patients involves altered metabolism via CYP activity and
depleted glutathione stores that cause accumulation of a hepatotoxic
intermediate, NAPQI. However, available studies in these patients group have
shown that although the half-life of paracetamol may be prolonged, CYP
activity is not increased (potentially leading to a lesser degree of NAPQI
formation) and glutathione stores are generally sufficient to avoid
paracetamol hepatotoxicity (21). As a result, a number of studies claimed
that concerns about administration of therapeutic doses of paracetamol in the
cirrhotic patients are often inaccurate (21).
Different available studies have evaluated the safety and efficacy of
paracetamol administration in cirrhotic patients. It has been indicated that
for short-term use or 1-time dosing, up to 4 g/d appears to be well tolerated
for both healthy and cirrhotic individuals, using alcohol regularly (22, 23).
This assumption is supported by a double-blind, crossover study of 20
patients with chronic liver disease (including 8 cirrhosis), who tolerated
paracetamol at a dosage of 4 g/d for 13 days without adverse effects (21). In
other survey conducted by Lucena et al. (24), paracetamol was safely used as
a dosage of 3 g/d even in those with alcoholic cirrhosis. The findings of another
case control study evaluating the implication of paracetamol in patients with
cirrhosis suggested no association between the occasional use of low dose
paracetamol (2-3 g/d) and the acute decompensation of cirrhosis (25).
Nonetheless, another study reported the elevation of aspartate
aminotransferase (AST) levels in healthy adults, receiving 4 g/d for 14 days
(26). Based on this finding, in 2006, the American Liver Foundation (ALF)
issued recommendations that people not exceed 3 g/d of acetaminophen for any
prolonged period of time (27). The ALF noted no issue with short-term use of
4 g/d. On the basis of data from different studies and with the new FDA
guidelines in mind current recommendation for long-term acetaminophen use
(> 14 days) in cirrhotic patients (not actively drinking alcohol) is for
reduced dosing at 2 to 3 g/d (21, 28).
Because of its proven safety profile (when given in recommended
doses) and the lack of sedative effects and absence of nephrotoxicity,
paracetamol is the preferred analgesic in patients with liver disease
including cirrhosis. However, because paracetamol overdose is known as one of
the most common cause of liver failure, it is not surprising that the
majority of pain practitioners are not willing to prescribe it to patients
with any form of liver disease.
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Medicines Issues in Liver Disease
https://www.ukmi.nhs.uk/NonCMS/conferenceDB2011/presentations/201102_01_Medicinesissuesinliverdisease.pdf
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Paracetamol Use
*
Use in mild
hepatitis? Yes (caution alcoholics)
*
In cholestasis? Yes
*
In cirrhosis? Yes,
Suggest to reduce to TDS in severe decompensated cirrhosis
*
In acute liver
failure? Yes – possibly
reduce to TDS ; HOWEVER, NOT if cause of ALF
is POD!
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In 2006, the American Liver Foundation
(ALF) issued recommendations that patients not exceed 3 grams a day of
acetaminophen for any "prolonged period of time." They pointed to a
study that reported aspartate aminotransferase (AST) levels were elevated in
healthy patients receiving 4 grams per day for 14 days. The ALF noted no
issue with short-term use of 4 gram dosing.
Burns et al recommended that for
patients with chronic active alcohol ingestion and cirrhosis, acetaminophen
may be used at a maximum of 2 grams per day, which is one-half the
recommended daily dose (well below toxicity levels). In addition, the 2013 American Chronic Pain Association
stated that although the maximum recommended adult dose for acetaminophen is
4 grams per day, and 3 grams per day in older persons, patients can have
asymptomatic elevations in liver enzymes at 2 grams per day of acetaminophen.
Some healthcare professionals encourage patients to stay well below the 4
grams per day cutoff, even in patients without chronic liver disease or other
concerns.
In consideration of these findings,
normal recommended doses of acetaminophen can be safely given for short-term
use to patients who suffer from chronic
stable liver disease (CSLD), provided they do not drink alcohol or take
medications that could increase CYP activity. For long-term treatment, it is prudent to limit total daily dosing in
CSLD patients to 2 to 3 grams per day, until additional studies can
demonstrate safety. These patients were not shown to have elevated CYP450
level, nor significantly reduced glutathione levels. While it is true that
these patients may metabolize acetaminophen more slowly than their healthy
counterparts, no evidence of toxic accumulation has been seen to date.
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UptoDate: Analgesic use in adult patients with advanced chronic liver
disease or cirrhosis
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·
Glutathione tissue stores needed to block
formation of acetaminophen's toxic metabolite (NAPQI) are reduced in
individuals with cirrhosis or malnutrition, thereby lowering the dose
threshold of acetaminophen that can be safely administered each day.
·
Active alcohol consumption further reduces
available glutathione stores.
·
Half-life of acetaminophen may be prolonged by
up to 2-fold compared with healthy patients.
·
Acetaminophen
is generally well tolerated in patients with chronic liver disease (CLD) or
cirrhosis who do not consume alcohol, provided the total daily dose is
limited to no more than 2 g/day.
·
For
short-term or one-time use, a maximum total acetaminophen dose of up to 4
g/day may be considered in lower risk patients who do not consume alcohol and
have CLD or early stage compensated cirrhosis.
·
Warn patients concerning acetaminophen content
in combination prescription analgesics (eg, oxycodone-acetaminophen) and
non-prescription (OTC) preparations.
·
Avoid use in patients with advanced CLD or
cirrhosis who are actively consuming alcohol, malnourished, not eating,
receiving multiple medications that undergo hepatic biotransformations, or
any co-administered medication that is a potent inducer of hepatic enzymes.
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Uptodate: Acetaminophen (paracetamol): Drug information
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Note: Safety: Acetaminophen-induced
hepatotoxicity, which can be life threatening, has been associated with doses
>4 g/day. Although doses up to 4 g/day are generally well tolerated
(Dart 2007; Krenzelok 2012; Larson 2007; Temple 2006; Whitcomb 1994),
hepatotoxicity has been reported rarely at this dose limit (Amar 2007).
Due to this risk, some experts
recommend a lower maximum dose of 3 g/day in adults with normal liver
function, particularly when used for longer durations (eg, >7 days) for
pain (Chou 2019).
Heavy alcohol use,
malnutrition, fasting, low body weight, advanced age, febrile illness, select
liver disease, and use of drugs that interact with acetaminophen metabolism
may increase risk of hepatotoxicity; a lower total daily dose (eg, 2 g/day)
or avoidance may be preferred (Hamilton 2019b; Hayward 2016; Larson
2007). When calculating total daily dose, confirm that all sources (eg,
prescription, OTCs, combinations) are included.
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All information accessed on 18.02.2020
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