Assessment of drug-induced liver injury in clinical practice.
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Wiley
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Abstract
Currently, pharmaceutical preparations are serious contributors to liver disease, with
hepatotoxicity ranking as the most frequent cause for acute liver failure and postmarketing
regulatory decisions. The diagnostic approach of drug-induced liver injury
(DILI) is still rudimentary and inaccurate because of the lack of reliable markers for
use in general clinical practice. To incriminate any given drug in an episode of liver
dysfunction is a step-by-step process that requires a high degree of suspicion,
compatible chronology, awareness of the drug’s hepatotoxic potential, the exclusion
of alternative causes of liver damage, and the ability to detect the presence of subtle
data that favour a toxic aetiology. Clinical and laboratory data may also be assessed
with algorithms or clinical scales, which may add consistency to the clinical
judgment by translating the suspicion into a quantitative score. The CIOMS/RUCAM
instrument is considered at present the best method for assessing causality in DILI,
although it could be improved through the use of large database of bona fide DILI
cases for validation criteria.
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https://openpolicyfinder.jisc.ac.uk/id/publication/13944
Bibliographic citation
Lucena MI, García-Cortés M, Cueto R, Lopez-Duran J, Andrade RJ. Assessment of drug-induced liver injury in clinical practice. Fundam Clin Pharmacol. 2008 Apr;22(2):141-58. doi: 10.1111/j.1472-8206.2008.00566.x. Erratum in: Fundam Clin Pharmacol. 2009 Feb;23(1):147. PMID: 18353109.











