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Query: UMLS:C0015695 (
fatty liver
)
13,941
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Recently, several class-related adverse events have been recognized with antiretroviral drugs. For nucleoside analogue
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors. (NRTI), lactic acidosis with hepatomegaly and
hepatic steatosis
have been reported. These appear to occur at a low frequency, but with a high fatality rate. We report a case of fatal lactic acidosis in a patient with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) treated with stavudine (d4T), lamivudine (3TC) and indinavir (IDV). A 48-year-old male AIDS patient was admitted with complaints of general fatigue and dyspnea. His medications at presentation included d4T, 3TC and IDV. Physical examination demonstrated icteric sclerae and abdominal tenderness with hepatomegaly. Laboratory data demonstrated a severe metabolic acidosis with an anion gap due to lactate accumulation. Despite intensive treatment, cardiorespiratory arrest occurred and this could not be resuscitated.
...
PMID:[Fatal lactic acidosis in a patient with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome treated with stavudine, lamivudine and indinavir]. 1065 86
Lactic acidosis and
hepatic steatosis
caused by mitochondrial toxicity of nucleoside
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors (NRTI) is a rare cause of liver disease with a high mortality rate. This report describes a male, HIV-positive patient with a 4-week history of nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain. His medication consisted of prednisone 5 mg od (because of auto-immune thrombocytopenia), didanosine (for 2 years) and stavudine (for 3 months). Laboratory studies showed cholestasis and elevation of aminotransferases. Lactic level was not measured. Liver biopsy revealed steatosis and cholestatic hepatitis. In the absence of other causes of liver disease a probable diagnosis of stavudine-induced hepatic toxicity was made. After discontinuation of NRTI, he recovered completely. Because lactic acidosis had not been confirmed, stavudine was restarted and within 1 week the lactate level increased significantly. Therefore stavudine was discontinued again. One year later the patient is doing well on a double protease inhibitor regimen. In conclusion, clinicians treating patients with NRTI should be aware of the risk of lactic acidosis and
hepatic steatosis
. When this is suspected, all NRTI must be stopped. The diagnosis can be made when elevated lactate levels and
hepatic steatosis
are present in the absence of other causes of liver disease.
...
PMID:Hepatic steatosis and lactic acidosis caused by stavudine in an HIV-infected patient. 1106 65
A 53-year-old woman with newly diagnosed HIV infection was treated with the nucleoside analogue antiretroviral agents lamivudine and stavudine and the protease inhibitor indinavir. An illness characterized by severe lethargy, persistent nausea and vomiting, lactic acidosis, hyperglycemia, and microvesicular
hepatic steatosis
developed. Her symptoms improved gradually after withdrawal of the antiretroviral agents. The illness can be explained by mitochondrial dysfunction caused by inhibition of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) polymerase by the nucleoside analogues. The patient was successfully treated with nonnucleoside
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors, which lack affinity for mtDNA polymerase.
...
PMID:Lactic acidosis secondary to nucleoside analogue antiretroviral therapy. 1106 7
Since the adoption of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in the mid-1990s, certain metabolic toxicities have been increasingly recognized. These include a fat redistribution syndrome (lipohypertrophy, lipoatrophy), hyperlipidaemia, altered glucose metabolism and insulin resistance, mitochondrial toxicity (presenting as anaemia, myopathy, pancreatitis, neuropathy,
hepatic steatosis
and lactic acidosis), and bone density abnormalities (osteoporosis and osteonecrosis). Metabolic complications are principally reported with protease inhibitors and nucleoside
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors, but may be seen with all classes of antiretroviral therapy. In this review, we summarize the epidemiology, pathogenesis and management of these various toxicities.
...
PMID:The metabolic toxicities of antiretroviral therapy. 1151 63
The introduction of newer and more potent agents has diverted attention away from the importance of nucleoside analogue
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors (NRTIs) in modern antiretroviral drug regimens. As a class, these proviral chain terminators lack the virological potency of either non-nucleoside
reverse transcriptase
inhibitor (NNRTI) or protease inhibitor (PI) drugs, due largely to their competitive mode of inhibition and requirement for metabolic activation. However, neither NNRTIs nor PIs alone can maintain the complete suppression of HIV replication required for extended therapy, and both suffer from serious class cross-resistance on therapeutic failure. Thus, the NRTIs will remain essential components of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) for the foreseeable future, both for their contribution to a regimen's virological potency and the subsequent preservation of the more potent drug classes used with them. However, it has become apparent in recent years that the current NRTIs exhibit duration-dependent adverse events as a class, which may limit the length of time for which they can be safely used. An independent contribution to peripheral fat wasting in lipodystrophy syndrome has been established for the use of NRTI drugs. Of greater clinical concern is their established association with potentially fatal lactic acidaemia and
hepatic steatosis
. Both these class events, as well as several individual drug events, such as peripheral; neuropathy, can be linked to progressive mitochondrial destruction with a greater or lesser degree of confidence. Mitochondrial toxicity, due in large part to the high affinity of several NRTI agents for uptake by mitochondrial DNA polymerase gamma, has been demonstrated both in vitro and in vivo. New chain-terminating agents are urgently needed that address issues of improved virological potency, greater efficacy in NRTI-experienced individuals, and greater long-term safety. The nucleotide class of
reverse transcriptase
inhibitor (NtRTI), currently under clinical development, addresses improved potency by abbreviating the intracellular activation pathway to allow a more rapid and complete conversion to the active agent. These nucleoside monophosphate analogues are taken as masked prodrugs bearing labile lipophilic groups to facilitate penetration of target cell membranes. Subsequent unmasking by endogenous chemolytic enzymes releases a partially activated nucleoside analogue metabolite. The NtRTI furthest along the developmental process is tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF), an orally available acyclic adenine phosphonate analogue, currently in Phase III clinical trials. This agent has shown high potency and an unusually durable response in trials of single-agent therapy intensification in highly treatment-experienced individuals, and its active metabolite, tenofovir diphosphate, exhibits a long intracellular half-life in both resting and activated peripheral blood mononuclear cells that permits once daily dosing. Tenofovir diphosphate also exhibits a very low affinity for DNA polymerase gamma in vitro, suggesting a low degree of in vivo mitochondrial toxicity may be observed on long-term follow-up, although clinical data to support this inference are not yet available. The introduction of TDF and other NtRTIs as 'second-generation' nucleoside analogues carefully evaluated for potential long-term toxicity, can be expected to significantly improve the therapeutic options for both those currently on HAART and those yet to begin.
...
PMID:An introduction to nucleoside and nucleotide analogues. 1167 69
Hyperlactatemia associated with use of nucleoside analogue
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors (NRTIs) is not a single entity but a spectrum of abnormalities. The spectrum reflects varying degrees of derangement in systemic homeostasis in the face of primary drug effects on lactate load. Lactic acidosis, characterized by metabolic acidosis, blood lactate above 5 mmol/l,
hepatic steatosis
and high mortality, represents the extreme end of this spectrum where there is complete decompensation. Partially compensated states of lactate excess have now been described, ranging from less fulminant symptomatic hyperlactatemia with
hepatic steatosis
to chronic or intermittent low-grade hyperlactatemia without acidosis, steatosis or any symptoms. At a population level, average venous lactate concentrations do rise following treatment with NRTIs but stabilize long term in the majority of cases. The average increase in systemic lactate turnover that is required to maintain such compensated blood levels is not known and research into this may provide insights into the extent of incipient mitochondrial toxicity associated with chronic NRTI use. At a tissue-specific level, it is not known which tissues or organs (liver, fat, other) are the predominant contributors to an increase in systemic lactate load, nor whether the primary defect is one of increased production, decreased elimination or both.
...
PMID:Hyperlactatemia syndromes in people with HIV infection. 1196 2
Nucleoside analog
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors (NRTI) have been used to treat HIV-infected patients for >10 years. Some severe adverse events have been attributed to mitochondrial dysfunction. Since 1991, cases of severe lactic acidosis have been reported in association with nucleoside therapy. Our objective was to report two cases of metabolic acidosis and
hepatic steatosis
in patients receiving stavudine (d4T) and to review the literature. A male and a female, 47 and 45 years of age, respectively, presented with abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and weakness after 9 and 6 months, respectively, of treatment with stavudine. At presentation, both patients had severe metabolic acidosis and liver failure. Ultrasonography showed
hepatic steatosis
(confirmed by biopsy in one case). All antiretroviral drugs were withdrawn and patients were treated with bicarbonate. Both patients developed fulminant liver dysfunction and multiple organ failure. We reviewed the literature and found 75 cases of lactic acidosis and
hepatic steatosis
associated with use of NRTI; 57 of these patients received d4T (76%). Of all cases reported in association with nucleoside therapy, 63% were females and mortality was 47%. General weakness, hepatic enzyme elevation, and liver steatosis are data that should alert physicians to this serious adverse event and to respond with prompt interruption of antiretroviral drugs and measurement of lactic acid in plasma. It is important to report serious adverse events in commercially released drugs to know prevalence in an exposed population. Physicians should be aware of risk and early signs of this serious adverse event.
...
PMID:Metabolic acidosis and hepatic steatosis in two HIV-infected patients on stavudine (d4T) treatment. 1260 78
HAART has resulted in dramatic declines in morbidity and mortality among patients infected with HIV. Increased experience with HAART has led to the detection of drug related toxicities that may compromise adherence and necessitate discontinuation of treatment and alteration of otherwise effective regimens. This article considers the major long-term complications associated with nucleoside
reverse transcriptase
inhibitor (NRTI) use--hyperlactatemia and lactic acidosis/
hepatic steatosis
, other hepatotoxicities, pancreatitis, lipodystrophy, lipoatrophy, neuropathy, and hematologic toxicities. Mechanisms by which NRTIs may produce these effects are discussed, as are differential effects of agents in this class and management options.
...
PMID:Long-term complications of nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor therapy. 1274 68
Hyperlactataemia is seen in 8-18.3% of HIV-infected patients taking nucleoside-analogue
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors (NRTIs). Recent epidemiological studies suggest that most episodes are transient and subclinical. However, symptomatic and occasionally life-threatening cases accompanied by metabolic acidosis and
hepatic steatosis
(ie, lactic acidosis syndrome) have also been described. Though yet to be fully elucidated, the proposed mechanism is NRTI-induced inhibition of mitochondrial DNA polymerase culminating in derangements in oxidative phosphorylation and lactate homeostasis. Signs and symptoms range from mild hyperlactataemia accompanied by nausea, abdominal discomfort, and weight loss to severe, intractable lactic acidosis complicated by coma and multi-organ failure. Significant progress has recently been made with regard to the natural history of NRTI-related hyperlactataemia. However, other important aspects of the disorder, such as its pathogenesis, predisposing conditions, and management, remain poorly understood. This article reviews the current published work on these issues, identifies areas of controversy, and addresses directions for future research.
...
PMID:Hyperlactataemia syndromes associated with HIV therapy. 1452 59
Hepatotoxicity is an adverse effect of all available classes of antiretrovirals, including nucleoside
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors (NRTI). A syndrome of
hepatic steatosis
and lactic acidosis has been recognized as a rare, potentially fatal complication since the advent of NRTI monotherapy in the early 1990s. Today, NRTI remain the backbone of antiretroviral combination regimens, and, with the success of current treatment strategies, exposure to two or more of these agents may occur over a number of years.
Hepatic steatosis
and lactic acidosis are accordingly being observed more frequently, along with a more recently recognized syndrome of chronic hyperlactatemia. These as well as other adverse effects of NRTI are mediated by inhibition of human DNA polymerase gamma, resulting in mitochondrial dysfunction in the liver and other tissues. Early recognition and intervention are essential to avert serious outcomes.
...
PMID:Hepatotoxicity of nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors. 1280 69
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