Department of Pharmacology & Toxicology, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 3M2, Canada.
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 3M2, Canada.
Toxicol Sci. 2024 Jun 26;200(1):146-164. doi: 10.1093/toxsci/kfae054.
Nevirapine, an antiretroviral used in the treatment of HIV, is associated with idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury (IDILI), a potentially life-threatening adverse drug reaction. Its usage has decreased due to this concern, but it is still widely used in lower-resource settings. In general, the mechanisms underlying idiosyncratic drug reactions (IDRs) are poorly understood, but evidence indicates that most are immune-mediated. There is very limited understanding of the early immune response following administration of drugs associated with IDRs, which likely occurs due to reactive metabolite formation. In this work, we aimed to characterize the links between covalent binding of nevirapine, the development of an early immune response, and the subsequent liver injury using a mouse model. We describe initial attempts to characterize an early immune response to nevirapine followed by the discovery that nevirapine induced the release of corticosterone. Corticosterone release was partially associated with the degree of drug covalent binding in the liver but was also likely mediated by additional mechanisms at higher drug doses. Transcriptomic analysis confirmed metabolic activation, glucocorticoid signaling, and decreased immune activation; GDF-15 also warrants further investigation as part of the immune response to nevirapine. Finally, glucocorticoid blockade preceding the first dose of nevirapine attenuated nevirapine-induced liver injury at 3 weeks, suggesting that acute glucocorticoid signaling is harmful in the context of nevirapine-induced liver injury. This work demonstrates that nevirapine induces acute corticosterone release, which contributes to delayed-onset liver injury. It also has implications for screening drug candidates for IDILI risk and preventing nevirapine-induced IDILI.
奈韦拉平是一种用于治疗 HIV 的抗逆转录病毒药物,与特发性药物性肝损伤(IDILI)有关,这是一种潜在的危及生命的药物不良反应。由于这种担忧,其使用已经减少,但它仍在资源较少的环境中广泛使用。一般来说,特发性药物反应(IDRs)的机制理解甚少,但有证据表明,大多数是免疫介导的。对于与 IDRs 相关的药物给药后早期免疫反应的了解非常有限,这可能是由于反应性代谢物的形成。在这项工作中,我们旨在使用小鼠模型来描述奈韦拉平的共价结合、早期免疫反应的发展以及随后的肝损伤之间的联系。我们描述了最初尝试表征奈韦拉平的早期免疫反应,然后发现奈韦拉平诱导了皮质酮的释放。皮质酮的释放部分与肝内药物共价结合的程度相关,但在较高药物剂量下也可能通过其他机制介导。转录组分析证实了代谢激活、糖皮质激素信号和免疫激活减少;GDF-15 也作为奈韦拉平免疫反应的一部分值得进一步研究。最后,在首次给予奈韦拉平之前阻断糖皮质激素,可减轻 3 周时奈韦拉平引起的肝损伤,表明急性糖皮质激素信号在奈韦拉平引起的肝损伤中是有害的。这项工作表明,奈韦拉平诱导急性皮质酮释放,这有助于延迟发作的肝损伤。它还对筛选 IDILI 风险的药物候选物和预防奈韦拉平引起的 IDILI 具有影响。