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Drug-induced hepatitis in an acromegalic patient during combined treatment with pegvisomant and octreotide long-acting repeatable attributed to the use of pegvisomant
36
Citations
3
References
2006
Year
HepatologySevere Drug-induced HepatitisViral HepatitisMedicineLiver PhysiologyLong-acting Somatostatin-analog OctreotideHepatitisPathologyHepatotoxicityPharmacotherapyOctreotide Long-actingLiver DiseaseDrug-induced HepatitisLong-acting Somatostatin AnalogPharmacologyDrug-induced Liver InjuryAcromegalic PatientAutoimmune Liver Disease
We report on a patient with acromegaly who developed severe drug-induced hepatitis during combined treatment with the long-acting somatostatin-analog octreotide and the GH receptor antagonist pegvisomant. The hepatic enzyme disturbances normalized after discontinuation of pegvisomant. After rechallenge with monotherapy pegvisomant, however, the hepatic enzyme disturbances reappeared within a few weeks, indicating that most likely pegvisomant alone and not the long-acting somatostatin analog or the combination of these two drugs was responsible for this case of drug-induced hepatitis. Clinicians should be aware of this potential severe adverse drug reaction and therefore frequent control of hepatic enzymes is mandatory during treatment with pegvisomant.
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