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Measurement of Acetaminophen‐Protein Adducts in Children and Adolescents with Acetaminophen Overdoses
Author(s) -
James Laura P,
Farrar Henry C.,
Sullivan Janice E.,
Givens Timothy G.,
Kearns Gregory L.,
Wasserman Gary S.,
Walson Philip D.,
Hinson Jack A.,
Pumford Neil R.
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
the journal of clinical pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.92
H-Index - 116
eISSN - 1552-4604
pISSN - 0091-2700
DOI - 10.1177/00912700122010744
Subject(s) - acetaminophen , acetaminophen overdose , medicine , transaminase , nomogram , alanine transaminase , liver injury , toxicity , gastroenterology , pharmacology , acetylcysteine , chemistry , biochemistry , enzyme , antioxidant
Acetaminophen‐protein adducts are biomarkers of acetaminophen toxicity present in the centrilobular region of the liver of laboratory animals following the administration of toxic doses of acetaminophen. These biomarkers are highly specific for acetaminophen‐induced hepatic injury and correlate with hepatic transaminase elevation. The objective of this prospective, multicenter study was to evaluate the clinical application of the measurement of acetaminophen‐protein adducts in pediatric acetaminophen overdose patients. Serum samples were obtained from 51 children and adolescents with acetaminophen overdose at the time ofrou‐ tine blood sampling for clinical monitoring. Six subjects developed “severe” hepatotoxicity (transaminase elevation > 1000IU/L), and 6 subjects had transaminase elevation of 100 to 1000 IU/L. Acetaminophen‐protein adducts were detected in the serum of only 1 study subject, a patient with marked transaminase elevation (> 6000 IU/L) and high riskforthe development of hepatotoxicity according to the Rumack nomogram. While this study provides further support for the occurrence of covalent binding of acetaminophen to hepatic protein in humans following acetaminophen overdose, the detection of acetaminophen‐protein adducts in serum with the current methodology requires significant biochemical evidence of hepatocellular injury.