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Annals of Internal Medicine 2012-Jun

Acute liver injury due to flavocoxid (Limbrel), a medical food for osteoarthritis: a case series.

Només els usuaris registrats poden traduir articles
Inicieu sessió / registreu-vos
L'enllaç es desa al porta-retalls
Naga Chalasani
Raj Vuppalanchi
Victor Navarro
Robert Fontana
Herbert Bonkovsky
Huiman Barnhart
David E Kleiner
Jay H Hoofnagle

Paraules clau

Resum

BACKGROUND

Flavocoxid is a prescription medical food that is used to treat osteoarthritis. It is a proprietary blend of 2 flavonoids, baicalin and catechins, which are derived from the botanicals Scutellaria baicalensis and Acacia catechu, respectively.

OBJECTIVE

To describe characteristics of patients with acute liver injury suspected of being caused by flavocoxid.

METHODS

Case series.

METHODS

Drug-Induced Liver Injury Network Prospective Study ongoing at multiple academic medical centers since 2004.

METHODS

Four adults with liver injury.

METHODS

Clinical characteristics, liver biochemistry values, and outcomes.

RESULTS

Among 877 patients enrolled in the prospective study, 4 had liver injury suspected to have been caused by flavocoxid. All were women; ages ranged from 57 to 68 years. All developed symptoms and signs of liver injury within 1 to 3 months after initiating flavocoxid. Liver injury was characterized by marked elevations in levels of alanine aminotransferase (mean peak, 1268 U/L; range, 741 to 1540 U/L), alkaline phosphatase (mean peak, 510 U/L; range, 286 to 770 U/L), and serum bilirubin (mean peak, 160.7 µmol/L [9.4 mg/dL]; range, 34.2 to 356 µmol/L [2.0 to 20.8 mg/dL]). Liver biochemistry values decreased to the normal range within 3 to 12 weeks after flavocoxid was stopped, and all patients recovered without experiencing acute liver failure or chronic liver injury. Causality was adjudicated as highly likely in 3 patients and as possible in 1 patient.

CONCLUSIONS

The frequency and mechanism of liver injury could not be assessed.

CONCLUSIONS

Flavocoxid can cause clinically significant liver injury, which seems to resolve within weeks after cessation.

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