Boelsterli Urs A
HepaTox Consulting, CH-4148 Pfeffingen, and Institute of Clinical Pharmacy, University of Basel, CH-4031 Basel, Switzerland.
Toxicol Appl Pharmacol. 2003 Nov 1;192(3):307-22. doi: 10.1016/s0041-008x(03)00368-5.
The nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug diclofenac causes rare but significant cases of serious hepatotoxicity, typically with a delayed onset (>1-3 months). Because there is no simple dose relationship and because liver injury cannot be reproduced in current animal models, individual patient-specific susceptibility factors have been evoked to account for the increased risk. While these patient factors have remained undefined, a number of molecular hazards have been characterized. Among these are metabolic factors (bioactivation by hCYP2C9 or hCYP3A4 to thiol-reactive quinone imines, activation by hUGT2B7 to protein-reactive acyl glucuronides and iso-glucuronides, and 4'-hydroxylation secondary to diclofenac glucuronidation), as well as kinetic factors (Mrp2-mediated concentrative transport of diclofenac metabolites into bile). From the toxicodynamic view, both oxidative stress (caused by putative diclofenac cation radicals or nitroxide and quinone imine-related redox cycling) and mitochondrial injury (protonophoretic activity and opening of the permeability transition pore) alone or in combination have been implicated in diclofenac toxicity. In some cases, immune-mediated liver injury is involved, inferred from inadvertent rechallenge data and from a number of experiments demonstrating T cell sensitization. Why certain underlying diseases (e.g., osteoarthritis) also increase the susceptibility to diclofenac hepatotoxicity is not clear. To date, cumulative damage to mitochondrial targets seems a plausible putative mechanism to explain the delayed onset of liver failure, perhaps even superimposed on an underlying silent mitochondrial abnormality. Increased efforts to identify both patient-specific risk factors and disease-related factors will help to define patient subsets at risk as well as increase the predictability of unexpected hepatotoxicity in drug development.
非甾体抗炎药双氯芬酸会导致罕见但严重的严重肝毒性病例,通常起病延迟(>1 - 3个月)。由于不存在简单的剂量关系,且目前的动物模型无法再现肝损伤,因此人们提出了个体患者特异性的易感因素来解释风险增加的原因。虽然这些患者因素尚未明确,但已确定了一些分子危害。其中包括代谢因素(由hCYP2C9或hCYP3A4生物活化生成硫醇反应性醌亚胺,由hUGT2B7活化生成蛋白质反应性酰基葡萄糖醛酸和异葡萄糖醛酸,以及双氯芬酸葡萄糖醛酸化后的4'-羟基化),以及动力学因素(Mrp2介导的双氯芬酸代谢物向胆汁中的浓缩转运)。从毒理学角度来看,氧化应激(由假定的双氯芬酸阳离子自由基或硝基氧化物以及醌亚胺相关的氧化还原循环引起)和线粒体损伤(质子载体活性和通透性转换孔的开放)单独或共同作用都与双氯芬酸毒性有关。在某些情况下,免疫介导的肝损伤也有涉及,这是根据意外再激发数据以及一些证明T细胞致敏的实验推断出来的。某些潜在疾病(如骨关节炎)为何也会增加对双氯芬酸肝毒性的易感性尚不清楚。迄今为止,线粒体靶点的累积损伤似乎是解释肝衰竭延迟发作的一种合理推测机制,甚至可能叠加在潜在的隐匿性线粒体异常之上。加大力度识别患者特异性风险因素和疾病相关因素,将有助于确定有风险的患者亚组,并提高药物开发中意外肝毒性的可预测性。