Inflammatory Stress and Idiosyncratic Hepatotoxicity: Hints from Animal Models
TL;DR: The inflammatory stress hypothesis is discussed and two drugs that have caused IADRs in human patients are used as examples: ranitidine and diclofenac.
read more
Abstract: Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) present a serious human health problem. They are major contributors to hospitalization and mortality throughout the world (Lazarou et al., 1998; Pirmohamed et al., 2004). A small fraction (less than 5%) of ADRs can be classified as “idiosyncratic.” Idiosyncratic ADRs (IADRs) are caused by drugs with diverse pharmacological effects and occur at various times during drug therapy. Although IADRs affect a number of organs, liver toxicity occurs frequently and is the primary focus of this review. Because of the inconsistency of clinical data and the lack of experimental animal models, how IADRs arise is largely undefined. Generation of toxic drug metabolites and induction of specific immunity are frequently cited as causes of IADRs, but definitive evidence supporting either mechanism is lacking for most drugs. Among the more recent hypotheses for causation of IADRs is that inflammatory stress induced by exogenous or endogenous inflammagens is a susceptibility factor. In this review, we give a brief overview of idiosyncratic hepatotoxicity and the inflammatory response induced by bacterial lipopolysaccharide. We discuss the inflammatory stress hypothesis and use as examples two drugs that have caused IADRs in human patients: ranitidine and diclofenac. The review focuses on experimental animal models that support the inflammatory stress hypothesis and on the mechanisms of hepatotoxic response in these models. The need for design of epidemiological studies and the potential for implementation of inflammation interaction studies in preclinical toxicity screening are also discussed briefly.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
A Mouse Model of Severe Halothane Hepatitis Based on Human Risk Factors
TL;DR: This is the first animal model of an idiosyncratic adverse drug reaction that is based on human risk factors and produces reproducible, severe hepatitis from halothane exposure with lesions characteristic of humanHalothane hepatitis, and these results suggest that a more robust innate immune response underlies the predisposition of female mice to halothsane hepatitis.
55
Three-Dimensional Spheroids With Primary Human Liver Cells and Differential Roles of Kupffer Cells in Drug-Induced Liver Injury
TL;DR: These 3D liver spheroid models are useful tools to understand the complex mechanisms underlying DILI and a protective role of KCs was shown in co-culture spheroids treated with both acetaminophen and LPS.
54
The hepatotoxicity of Polygonum multiflorum: The emerging role of the immune-mediated liver injury
TL;DR: Current epidemiological, clinical and experimental evidence about the possible role of innate and adaptive immunity in the idiosyncratic hepatotoxicity of P. multiflorum is assessed, giving the hypothesis of possible immune mechanisms of PM-DILI and providing suggestions for future studies on valuable biomarkers identification and proper immune models establishment.
51
Effects of genetic polymorphisms on the OCT1 and OCT2-mediated uptake of ranitidine.
TL;DR: Ranitidine was confirmed as an OCT1 substrate and it was demonstrated that common genetic polymorphisms in OCT1 strongly affect ranitidine uptake and modulate runitidine’s potential to cause drug-drug interactions.
References
Incidence of Adverse Drug Reactions in Hospitalized Patients: A Meta-analysis of Prospective Studies
TL;DR: The incidence of serious and fatal adverse drug reactions in US hospitals was found to be extremely high, and data suggest that ADRs represent an important clinical issue.
Getting to the site of inflammation: the leukocyte adhesion cascade updated
TL;DR: This Review focuses on new aspects of one of the central paradigms of inflammation and immunity — the leukocyte adhesion cascade.
4.4K
Purification and Characterization
C. Stan Tsai
- 14 Apr 2006
TL;DR: Fractions obtained after this chromatography showed, on SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, a main polypeptide band with an apparent Mr of about 56000, which specifically reacted with the monoclonal antibody, which inhibited cyclase activities from several lower eukaryotic organisms.
Adverse drug reactions as cause of admission to hospital: prospective analysis of 18 820 patients
Munir Pirmohamed,Sally James,Shaun Meakin,Chris D. Green,A Scott,Tom Walley,Keith Farrar,B. Kevin Park,Alasdair Breckenridge +8 more
TL;DR: The burden ofADRs on the NHS is high, accounting for considerable morbidity, mortality, and extra costs, and measures need to be put into place to reduce the burden of ADRs and thereby further improve the benefit:harm ratio of the drugs.
3.4K