Metamizole-associated hematological ADR remain frequently reported. This is underscored by increasing annual reporting rates, which mainly reflect growing metamizole use. Early detection of myelotoxicity and avoidance of other myelotoxic substances such as methotrexate are important measures for preventing fatalities.
Pharmacotherapy is complex in cirrhotic patients. Hepatologists should know the principles of dose adjustment in cirrhosis and renal failure, but also the most important pDDIs of the drugs used to treat liver disease and comorbidities in this population.
Amiodarone is a highly effective antiarrhythmic agent for the treatment and prevention of atrial and ventricular arrhythmias. Acute liver damage after intravenous amiodarone, possibly induced by the solubilizer polysorbate 80, is rare but potentially harmful. Amiodarone loading should therefore be adapted to the necessity of an immediate effect of the drug, and liver function should be monitored closely in critically ill patients. Oral maintenance therapy with amiodarone is possible, even in patients who developed liver disease during intravenous loading.
Aim and background To assess drug-related problems in patients with liver cirrhosis by investigating the prevalence of inadequately dosed drugs and their association with adverse drug reactions (ADRs) and hospitalizations. Methods This was a cross-sectional retrospective study assessing the dose adequacy of drug treatment of 400 cirrhotic patients at hospital admission based on the authors' own previous studies and standard literature. The prevalence of total and preventable ADRs and of hospitalizations due to preventable ADRs was determined. Results Of all 1653 drugs prescribed (median 4 per patient), 336 (20 %) drugs were inadequately dosed in 184 patients. Overall, 210 ADRs (78 % preventable) occurred in 120 patients. Sixty-nine ADRs (33 % of all ADRs) were associated with inadequate drug dosing in 46 patients, of which 68 % were preventable. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and psycholeptics in particular frequently caused preventable ADRs associated with inadequate drug dosing. Inadequate drug dosing was more frequently associated with ADRs than adequate drug dosing, and patients receiving inadequately dosed drugs were more frequently admitted to the hospital due to ADRs. Hospitalization of patients receiving inadequately dosed drugs that caused preventable ADRs resulted in 94 additional hospital days. ConclusionIn this retrospective study, inadequate drug dosing was associated with an increased frequency of ADRs, hospital admissions and hospital days in cirrhotic patients. We therefore conclude that the careful dosing of critical drugs is important in patients with liver cirrhosis.
Case reports and analyses of clinical studies and of pharmacovigilance data suggest that new oral anticoagulants (NOACs) are associated with a small risk for hepatotoxicity. The objective of this publication is to summarize the current data about this subject, with a special emphasis on pharmacovigilance data in the World Health Organization (WHO) Global Individual Case Safety Reports (ICSR) database and on potential mechanisms of hepatotoxicity. For that, all available case reports as well as published analyses of clinical studies were obtained with a detailed search in PubMed. In addition, pharmacovigilance data from VigiBase(®), the WHO Global ICRS database, were extracted and analyzed. The data show that liver injury associated with NOACs was reported in clinical studies and in pharmacovigilance databases. Several case reports described potentially life-threatening hepatotoxicity in patients treated with rivaroxaban or dabigatran. For rivaroxaban, most affected patients were symptomatic and liver injury was most often hepatocellular or mixed. The frequency was between 0.1 and 1 % in clinical studies and was by trend lower than for comparators (mostly enoxaparin or warfarin). Comparing the pharmacovigilance reports for the individual NOACs, more hepatic adverse events were reported for rivaroxaban than for dabigatran or apixaban. With the exception of edoxaban, for which only few reports are available, patients with acute liver failure have been reported for every NOAC, but most patients had concomitant drugs or diseases. So far, there are no clear mechanisms explaining the hepatotoxicity of these drugs. We conclude that hepatotoxicity appears to be associated with all NOACs currently on the market. Hepatotoxicity associated with NOACs is idiosyncratic; it appears at therapeutic doses, is rare and the mechanism is not related to the pharmacological action of these drugs. Prescribers should inform patients about possible symptoms of hepatotoxicity and stop these drugs in patients presenting with severe liver injury.
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