Fontana Robert J, Watkins Paul B, Bonkovsky Herbert L, Chalasani Naga, Davern Timothy, Serrano Jose, Rochon James
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-0362, USA.
Drug Saf. 2009;32(1):55-68. doi: 10.2165/00002018-200932010-00005.
Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is an uncommon adverse drug reaction of increasing importance to the medical community, pharmaceutical industry, regulatory agencies and the general public.
The Drug-Induced Liver Injury Network (DILIN) was established to advance understanding and research into DILI by initiating a prospective registry of patients with bona fide DILI for future studies of host clinical, genetic, environmental and immunological risk factors. The DILIN was also charged with developing standardized nomenclature, terminology and causality assessment instruments.
Five clinical sites, a data coordinating centre and senior scientists from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases initiated the DILIN prospective study in September 2004. Eligible patients are required to meet minimal laboratory or histological criteria within 6 months of DILI onset and have other competing causes of liver injury excluded. Patients in the general community setting with pre-existing HIV, hepatitis B virus or hepatitis C virus infections and/or abnormal baseline liver biochemistries are eligible for enrollment. In addition, subjects with liver injury due to herbal products are eligible to participate. Control patients without DILI are also to be recruited in the future.
All referred subjects undergo an extensive review of available laboratory, pathology and imaging studies. Subjects who meet pre-defined eligibility criteria at the 6-month study visit are followed for 2 years to better define the natural history of chronic DILI. Causality assessment is determined by a panel of three hepatologists who independently assign a causality score ranging from 1 (definite) to 5 (unlikely) as well as a severity score ranging from 1 (mild) to 5 (fatal). During the first 3 years, 367 subjects were enrolled into the DILIN prospective study.
DILIN is a multicentre research network charged with improving our understanding of the aetiologies, risk factors and outcomes of DILI in the US. The network is meeting the targeted enrollment of ten patients per month and is developing a repository of clinical data and biological samples for future studies of DILI pathogenesis and outcome.
药物性肝损伤(DILI)是一种罕见的药物不良反应,对医学界、制药行业、监管机构和公众的重要性日益增加。
建立药物性肝损伤网络(DILIN),通过启动一个真正DILI患者的前瞻性登记系统,以推进对DILI的理解和研究,用于未来对宿主临床、遗传、环境和免疫风险因素的研究。DILIN还负责制定标准化的命名法、术语和因果关系评估工具。
五个临床站点、一个数据协调中心以及美国国立糖尿病、消化和肾脏疾病研究所的资深科学家于2004年9月启动了DILIN前瞻性研究。符合条件的患者需在DILI发病后6个月内满足最低实验室或组织学标准,且排除其他竞争性肝损伤原因。普通社区中患有既往人类免疫缺陷病毒、乙型肝炎病毒或丙型肝炎病毒感染和/或基线肝生化异常的患者有资格入组。此外,因草药产品导致肝损伤的受试者也有资格参与。未来还将招募无DILI的对照患者。
所有转诊受试者都要对现有的实验室、病理学和影像学研究进行全面审查。在6个月研究访视时符合预定义入选标准的受试者将被随访2年,以更好地确定慢性DILI的自然病程。因果关系评估由三名肝病专家组成的小组进行,他们独立给出从1(肯定)到5(不太可能)的因果关系评分以及从1(轻度)到5(致命)的严重程度评分。在最初3年中,367名受试者被纳入DILIN前瞻性研究。
DILIN是一个多中心研究网络,负责增进我们对美国DILI的病因、风险因素和结局的理解。该网络正在实现每月招募10名患者的目标入组人数,并正在建立一个临床数据和生物样本库,用于未来对DILI发病机制和结局的研究。