Hepatic dysfunction in children with tuberculosis on treatment with antituberculous therapy

Aim. To determine the incidence and factors associated with drug induced hepatic dysfunction in children on anti-tuberculous treatment (ATT).Setting. Pediatric Tuberculosis Clinic at B.J. Wadia Children’s Hospital, Mumbai.Material and methods. 46 children with tuberculosis on ATT between April 2007...

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Main Authors: Sasha Mansukhani, Ira Shah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2012-01-01
Series:Annals of Hepatology
Subjects:
TB
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1665268119314929
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spelling doaj-0218f9f9a86f45babb1ee49261eab78d2021-06-09T05:54:53ZengElsevierAnnals of Hepatology1665-26812012-01-011119699Hepatic dysfunction in children with tuberculosis on treatment with antituberculous therapySasha Mansukhani0Ira Shah1Pediatric Tuberculosis Clinic, B.J. Wadia Hospital for Children, Parel, Mumbai, IndiaIncharge, Pediatric Tuberculosis Clinic, B.J. Wadia Hospital for Children, Parel, Mumbai, India; Correspondence and reprint request:Aim. To determine the incidence and factors associated with drug induced hepatic dysfunction in children on anti-tuberculous treatment (ATT).Setting. Pediatric Tuberculosis Clinic at B.J. Wadia Children’s Hospital, Mumbai.Material and methods. 46 children with tuberculosis on ATT between April 2007 and February 2008 were included. Serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase (SGPT) level was measured at the beginning, after 15 days of starting ATT, at the end intensive phase and then if the patient developed symptoms of hepatic dysfunction. A value 3 times the normal value of the testing laboratory was considered to be significant for liver dysfunction. Liver dysfunction was analysed for association with factors like age, sex, weight, malnutrition, type of tuberculosis and severity of tuberculosis using SPSS Statistics software, Ver-sion15.0.Results. Seven (15.2 %) out of 46 children developed drug induced hepatic dysfunction, of which 2 (28.6%) patients had 2 episodes of liver dysfunction while 5 (71.4%) had 1 episode of liver dysfunction. One (14.3%) developed symptom of hepatitis in the form of jaundice and hepatomegaly. All the patients developing liver dysfunction were in the intensive phase of treatment. The mean age of the children developing liver dysfunction was 4.0 ± 3.76 years. Liver dysfunction was associated with age younger than 3/ years (p = 0.025). Liver dysfunction was not associated with sex, weight, malnutrition, type of tuberculosis and severity of tuberculosis.Conclusion. Regular monitoring of SGPT levels is recommended in all children on ATT below the age of 3 / years.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1665268119314929TBTuberculosisHepatic dysfunctionTB treatmentChildren
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sasha Mansukhani
Ira Shah
spellingShingle Sasha Mansukhani
Ira Shah
Hepatic dysfunction in children with tuberculosis on treatment with antituberculous therapy
Annals of Hepatology
TB
Tuberculosis
Hepatic dysfunction
TB treatment
Children
author_facet Sasha Mansukhani
Ira Shah
author_sort Sasha Mansukhani
title Hepatic dysfunction in children with tuberculosis on treatment with antituberculous therapy
title_short Hepatic dysfunction in children with tuberculosis on treatment with antituberculous therapy
title_full Hepatic dysfunction in children with tuberculosis on treatment with antituberculous therapy
title_fullStr Hepatic dysfunction in children with tuberculosis on treatment with antituberculous therapy
title_full_unstemmed Hepatic dysfunction in children with tuberculosis on treatment with antituberculous therapy
title_sort hepatic dysfunction in children with tuberculosis on treatment with antituberculous therapy
publisher Elsevier
series Annals of Hepatology
issn 1665-2681
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Aim. To determine the incidence and factors associated with drug induced hepatic dysfunction in children on anti-tuberculous treatment (ATT).Setting. Pediatric Tuberculosis Clinic at B.J. Wadia Children’s Hospital, Mumbai.Material and methods. 46 children with tuberculosis on ATT between April 2007 and February 2008 were included. Serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase (SGPT) level was measured at the beginning, after 15 days of starting ATT, at the end intensive phase and then if the patient developed symptoms of hepatic dysfunction. A value 3 times the normal value of the testing laboratory was considered to be significant for liver dysfunction. Liver dysfunction was analysed for association with factors like age, sex, weight, malnutrition, type of tuberculosis and severity of tuberculosis using SPSS Statistics software, Ver-sion15.0.Results. Seven (15.2 %) out of 46 children developed drug induced hepatic dysfunction, of which 2 (28.6%) patients had 2 episodes of liver dysfunction while 5 (71.4%) had 1 episode of liver dysfunction. One (14.3%) developed symptom of hepatitis in the form of jaundice and hepatomegaly. All the patients developing liver dysfunction were in the intensive phase of treatment. The mean age of the children developing liver dysfunction was 4.0 ± 3.76 years. Liver dysfunction was associated with age younger than 3/ years (p = 0.025). Liver dysfunction was not associated with sex, weight, malnutrition, type of tuberculosis and severity of tuberculosis.Conclusion. Regular monitoring of SGPT levels is recommended in all children on ATT below the age of 3 / years.
topic TB
Tuberculosis
Hepatic dysfunction
TB treatment
Children
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1665268119314929
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