Hepatotoxicity
- Rare instances of idiosyncratic liver injury have been reported in persons receiving the first-generation penicillins.
- Many case reports pre-dated availability of serologic testing for viral hepatitis and many described patients with multiple reasons for having liver disease (such as sepsis) and who were receiving other potentially hepatotoxic agents.
- Three distinct forms of liver injury can occur with the first generation penicillins:
- with prolonged high doses of parenteral penicillin / IM
- usually asymptomatic and resolve rapidly with stopping therapy or switching to another antibiotic
- Jaundice and elevations in alkaline phosphatase are usually absent or mild.
- most common with oxacillin and carbenicillin, but can occur with parenteral forms of the first generation penicillins as well
- associated with severe hypersensitivity reactions, and
- severe hypersensitivity reactions to penicillin, such as Stevens-Johnson syndrome or anaphylaxis, may have an accompanying liver injury and jaundice
- Generalized allergic reactions to penicillin may be accompanied by granulomas in the liver, spleen and kidney, but are usually without evidence of specific hepatitis injury.
- are associated with hypersensitivity reactions, but liver injury is usually overshadowed by the allergic complications (rash, fever, anaphylaxis).
- isolated case reports
- Symptoms of nausea, abdominal discomfort, jaundice and pruritus generally arise 1 to 4 weeks after starting therapy and often a few days or weeks after completing a course.
- The serum enzyme pattern is usually cholestatic, but may be hepatocellular if tested soon after onset.
- Immunoallergic features are common but autoantibody formation is rare
- Most cases are mild-to-moderate in severity and resolve rapidly
- quite rare with the natural penicillins, more common with certain broad spectrum penicillins (cloxacillin, flucloxacillin) and is most common with amoxicillin with clavulanic acid
- asymptomatic rise in serum aminotransferase levels that occurs with high dose penicillin therapy usually resolves rapidly once penicillin is stopped.
- These patients may tolerate another form of penicillin without recurrence.
- In the few cases of cholestatic hepatitis that have been described with the first generation penicillins, patients have recovered although recovery was slow in some instances (2 to 6 months).
- Fatal cases of penicillin-associated liver injury have been described but usually in association with severe allergic reactions such as Stevens-Johnson syndrome in which shock and ischemic hepatitis may have contributed to the outcome.
- Patients with idiosyncratic liver injury attributed to penicillin should not be re-exposed to other penicillins
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.