Used to describe ductopenia related to drugs but not specific term
Etiology/Pathogenesis
• Many medication classes implicated
Antiinflammatory, antibiotics, antiepileptics, psychiatric drugs, tranquilizers, hypoglycemics, and others
• Also occurs with herbal or toxin exposure or genetic disposition
Clinical Issues
• Jaundice
Temporal relationship between drug administration and onset of signs and symptoms
Most patients recover fully with discontinuation of drug
Few cases develop chronic cholestatic injury
Microscopic
• Generally, no specific features indicating injury is drug related
Cholestasis, usually zone 3
Bile duct epithelial cell injury
– Cytoplasmic eosinophilia &/or vacuolization
– Nuclear pleomorphism and uneven nuclear spacing
– Apoptosis and atrophy of ductal epithelium
Bile ductular proliferation
Lymphocytic or mixed cell cholangitis
• Some cases show changes of progression/chronicity
Progressive ductopenia
Periportal hepatocyte swelling and copper accumulation
TERMINOLOGY
Synonyms
• Cholangiodestructive cholestasis
• Vanishing bile duct syndrome: Ductopenia related to drugs but not specific entity, ductopenia in graft-vs.-host disease and chronic ductopenic rejection
• Stevens-Johnson syndrome
Drug reaction associated with severe mucocutaneous manifestations and vanishing bile duct syndrome
Definitions
• Bile duct injury, cholangitis, &/or ductopenia related to adverse drug reactions
Often accompanied by cholestasis
ETIOLOGY/PATHOGENESIS
2 Categories of Injury
• Predictable: Dose related, reproducible, and related to intrinsic toxicity of drug or its metabolites
• Idiosyncratic: Unpredictable, unrelated to dose, not reproducible in animal models
Allergic or autoimmune responses to drug or its metabolite may be involved