A Challenge for Diagnosing Acute Liver Injury with Concomitant/Sequential Exposure to Multiple Drugs: Can Causality Assessment Scales Be Utilized to Identify the Offending Drug?

Drug-induced hepatotoxicity most commonly manifests as an acute hepatitis syndrome and remains the leading cause of drug-induced death/mortality and the primary reason for withdrawal of drugs from the pharmaceutical market. We report a case of acute liver injury in a 12-year-old Hispanic boy, who re...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Roxanne Lim, Hassan Choudry, Kim Conner, Wikrom Karnsakul
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2014-01-01
Series:Case Reports in Pediatrics
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/156389
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832554339026075648
author Roxanne Lim
Hassan Choudry
Kim Conner
Wikrom Karnsakul
author_facet Roxanne Lim
Hassan Choudry
Kim Conner
Wikrom Karnsakul
author_sort Roxanne Lim
collection DOAJ
description Drug-induced hepatotoxicity most commonly manifests as an acute hepatitis syndrome and remains the leading cause of drug-induced death/mortality and the primary reason for withdrawal of drugs from the pharmaceutical market. We report a case of acute liver injury in a 12-year-old Hispanic boy, who received a series of five antibiotics (amoxicillin, ceftriaxone, vancomycin, ampicillin/sulbactam, and clindamycin) for cervical lymphadenitis/retropharyngeal cellulitis. Histopathology of the liver biopsy specimen revealed acute cholestatic hepatitis. All known causes of acute liver injury were appropriately excluded and (only) drug-induced liver injury was left as a cause of his cholestasis. Liver-specific causality assessment scales such as Council for the International Organization of Medical Sciences/Roussel Uclaf Causality Assessment Method scoring system (CIOMS/RUCAM), Maria and Victorino scale, and Digestive Disease Week-Japan were applied to seek the most likely offending drug. Although clindamycin is the most likely cause by clinical diagnosis, none of causality assessment scales aid in the diagnosis.
format Article
id doaj-art-0ef3808f0ac44871a69c4cb222420a8a
institution Kabale University
issn 2090-6803
2090-6811
language English
publishDate 2014-01-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Case Reports in Pediatrics
spelling doaj-art-0ef3808f0ac44871a69c4cb222420a8a2025-02-03T05:51:38ZengWileyCase Reports in Pediatrics2090-68032090-68112014-01-01201410.1155/2014/156389156389A Challenge for Diagnosing Acute Liver Injury with Concomitant/Sequential Exposure to Multiple Drugs: Can Causality Assessment Scales Be Utilized to Identify the Offending Drug?Roxanne Lim0Hassan Choudry1Kim Conner2Wikrom Karnsakul3Division of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21287, USADivision of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21287, USADivision of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21287, USADivision of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21287, USADrug-induced hepatotoxicity most commonly manifests as an acute hepatitis syndrome and remains the leading cause of drug-induced death/mortality and the primary reason for withdrawal of drugs from the pharmaceutical market. We report a case of acute liver injury in a 12-year-old Hispanic boy, who received a series of five antibiotics (amoxicillin, ceftriaxone, vancomycin, ampicillin/sulbactam, and clindamycin) for cervical lymphadenitis/retropharyngeal cellulitis. Histopathology of the liver biopsy specimen revealed acute cholestatic hepatitis. All known causes of acute liver injury were appropriately excluded and (only) drug-induced liver injury was left as a cause of his cholestasis. Liver-specific causality assessment scales such as Council for the International Organization of Medical Sciences/Roussel Uclaf Causality Assessment Method scoring system (CIOMS/RUCAM), Maria and Victorino scale, and Digestive Disease Week-Japan were applied to seek the most likely offending drug. Although clindamycin is the most likely cause by clinical diagnosis, none of causality assessment scales aid in the diagnosis.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/156389
spellingShingle Roxanne Lim
Hassan Choudry
Kim Conner
Wikrom Karnsakul
A Challenge for Diagnosing Acute Liver Injury with Concomitant/Sequential Exposure to Multiple Drugs: Can Causality Assessment Scales Be Utilized to Identify the Offending Drug?
Case Reports in Pediatrics
title A Challenge for Diagnosing Acute Liver Injury with Concomitant/Sequential Exposure to Multiple Drugs: Can Causality Assessment Scales Be Utilized to Identify the Offending Drug?
title_full A Challenge for Diagnosing Acute Liver Injury with Concomitant/Sequential Exposure to Multiple Drugs: Can Causality Assessment Scales Be Utilized to Identify the Offending Drug?
title_fullStr A Challenge for Diagnosing Acute Liver Injury with Concomitant/Sequential Exposure to Multiple Drugs: Can Causality Assessment Scales Be Utilized to Identify the Offending Drug?
title_full_unstemmed A Challenge for Diagnosing Acute Liver Injury with Concomitant/Sequential Exposure to Multiple Drugs: Can Causality Assessment Scales Be Utilized to Identify the Offending Drug?
title_short A Challenge for Diagnosing Acute Liver Injury with Concomitant/Sequential Exposure to Multiple Drugs: Can Causality Assessment Scales Be Utilized to Identify the Offending Drug?
title_sort challenge for diagnosing acute liver injury with concomitant sequential exposure to multiple drugs can causality assessment scales be utilized to identify the offending drug
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/156389
work_keys_str_mv AT roxannelim achallengefordiagnosingacuteliverinjurywithconcomitantsequentialexposuretomultipledrugscancausalityassessmentscalesbeutilizedtoidentifytheoffendingdrug
AT hassanchoudry achallengefordiagnosingacuteliverinjurywithconcomitantsequentialexposuretomultipledrugscancausalityassessmentscalesbeutilizedtoidentifytheoffendingdrug
AT kimconner achallengefordiagnosingacuteliverinjurywithconcomitantsequentialexposuretomultipledrugscancausalityassessmentscalesbeutilizedtoidentifytheoffendingdrug
AT wikromkarnsakul achallengefordiagnosingacuteliverinjurywithconcomitantsequentialexposuretomultipledrugscancausalityassessmentscalesbeutilizedtoidentifytheoffendingdrug
AT roxannelim challengefordiagnosingacuteliverinjurywithconcomitantsequentialexposuretomultipledrugscancausalityassessmentscalesbeutilizedtoidentifytheoffendingdrug
AT hassanchoudry challengefordiagnosingacuteliverinjurywithconcomitantsequentialexposuretomultipledrugscancausalityassessmentscalesbeutilizedtoidentifytheoffendingdrug
AT kimconner challengefordiagnosingacuteliverinjurywithconcomitantsequentialexposuretomultipledrugscancausalityassessmentscalesbeutilizedtoidentifytheoffendingdrug
AT wikromkarnsakul challengefordiagnosingacuteliverinjurywithconcomitantsequentialexposuretomultipledrugscancausalityassessmentscalesbeutilizedtoidentifytheoffendingdrug