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Clinicopathological features of Bu Gu Zhi‐induced liver injury, a long‐term follow‐up cohort study
Author(s) -
Wang Lan,
Wang Yan,
Wee Aileen,
Soon Gwyneth,
Gouw Annette S. H.,
Yang Ruiyuan,
Tian Qiuju,
Liu Liwei,
Ma Hong,
Zhao Xinyan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
liver international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.873
H-Index - 110
eISSN - 1478-3231
pISSN - 1478-3223
DOI - 10.1111/liv.14306
Subject(s) - medicine , liver injury , gastroenterology , cholestasis , liver transplantation , bilirubin , cohort , liver biopsy , surgery , transplantation , biopsy
Background & Aims Bu Gu Zhi (BGZ) is a Chinese herb consumed mainly for osteoporosis treatment. Only small case series of BGZ‐induced liver injury (BGZILI) have been reported. We describe the clinicopathological features and clinical course of BGZILI. Methods Patients diagnosed with drug‐induced liver injury (DILI) at Beijing Friendship Hospital from 2005 to 2017 were reviewed. Clinical and follow‐up data were analysed. Results Of the 547 DILI patients, 40 cases (7.3%) were attributed to BGZILI. About 34/40 (85.0%) patients were females with a median age of 63 (range, 54‐70) years. The median latency period was 45 (range, 29‐90) days. Patients commonly presented with loss of appetite (57.5%), dark urine (57.5%) and fatigue (55.0%). The median level of alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase at BGZILI onset was 673.5 and 423.0 U/L respectively. Total bilirubin (TB) and direct bilirubin (DB) were 59.0 and 39.4 µmol/L respectively. The biochemical liver injury pattern was hepatocellular (92.5%), cholestatic (5.0%) and mixed (2.5%). They were categorized into ‘mild’ (N = 23, 57.5%), ‘moderate’ (6, 15.0%) or ‘severe’ (11, 27.5%) according to severity assessment by DILI network. The main histological injury pattern in 9/40 patients with liver biopsy was acute hepatitis with/without cholestasis. Median duration of follow‐up was 26.3 months with recovery in 37 patients within 6 months. No patients died or required transplantation. Conclusions BGZ‐induced liver injury manifested more often as a hepatocellular injury pattern with mild to moderate hepatocellular damage. Most patients recovered after cessation of BGZ within 6 months, and none developed end‐stage liver disease or died.

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