Drug-induced liver injury associated to red yeast rice.
María Desirée García-GarcíaFrancisco Bellido MuñozPatricia Cordero RuizAngel Caunedo ÁlvarezPublished in: Revista espanola de enfermedades digestivas (2023)
Hepatotoxicity is defined as a liver injury induced by a drug or a non-pharmacological agent like herbal medications or dietary supplements. Red yeast rice is rich in monacolin K, which has the same chemical structure as lovastatin, reason why it has been used for the management of hiperlipidemia. A 62 years old woman presented to the emergency service with 38.5ºC fever, coluric orine and loss of weight in the previous 3 weeks. The patient was taking RYR since the week before to the initial symptoms. Mixed hepatocellular and cholestatic acute hepatitis was diagnosed. Autoimmune liver serology resulted positive. Total DILI RECAM Score was 8 (highly probable DILI). Conservative treatment with exclusion of RYR was decided and during follow-up bilirubin and transaminases gradually dropped off. It has been reported a few cases of hepatitis associated to the use of RYR, promoted by a toxic or immunogenic metabolite. Cross-reactions may justify positive autoantibodies so hepatotoxicity should not be discard as a diagnose.
Keyphrases
- drug induced
- liver injury
- healthcare
- case report
- adverse drug
- saccharomyces cerevisiae
- emergency department
- public health
- mental health
- body mass index
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- weight loss
- cell wall
- multiple sclerosis
- liver failure
- weight gain
- randomized controlled trial
- sleep quality
- intensive care unit
- clinical trial
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- preterm birth
- body weight
- emergency medical