4.3 Review

Rechallenge in drug-induced liver injury: the attractive hazard

Journal

EXPERT OPINION ON DRUG SAFETY
Volume 8, Issue 6, Pages 709-714

Publisher

INFORMA HEALTHCARE
DOI: 10.1517/14740330903397378

Keywords

causality assessment; drug-induced liver injury; hepatotoxicity; rechallenge; re-exposure

Funding

  1. Agencia Espanola de Medicamentos, Fondo de Investigacion Sanitaria [FIS PI 07/0980, EC07/90910]
  2. Boehringer-Ingelheim, Barcelona, Spain
  3. Instituto de Salud Carlos III

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Progress in the understanding of drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is clearly hampered by the lack of specific markers of the disease. In this scenario, recrudescence of the liver injury upon re-exposure to the suspicious drug is considered the more reliable evidence of DILI. On-purpose re-exposure, however, entails both practical and ethical issues because the bulk of situations in clinical practice are non-immunoallergic DILI in which a provocation test frequently would give negative results. Besides, deliberate re-exposure with a drug that is not considered vital or essential is potentially harmful and, hence, hardly justified in DILI, and rechallenge is more commonly described in an unintentional basis. The causes, characteristics and consequences of rechallenge have been specifically addressed recently. For causality assessment, a positive rechallenge test carries the strong value, and is accordingly scored by clinical algorithms. Such clinical scales, however, reward drugs that are associated with a positive rechallenge response, but might be considered biased against those where re-administration fails to elicit a response or, more commonly, for which no rechallenge is attempted.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available