Select Language

English

Down Icon

Select Country

Poland

Down Icon

Drug-induced liver damage is related to bile acid metabolism

Drug-induced liver damage is related to bile acid metabolism

23/08/2025 update: 23/08/2025

2 minutes of reading

Analysis of metabolites in serum and feces revealed the role of bile acid metabolism in the assessment of drug-induced liver damage, reports the Journal of Clinical and Translational Hepatology .

Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is damage or dysfunction of the liver associated with the use of drugs (including those considered "natural" or "traditional").

Although DILI is relatively common, the precise mechanisms underlying it are not fully understood. There are also no specific biomarkers that would facilitate diagnosis and, consequently, treatment and prognosis.

Therefore, Chinese researchers from PLA General Hospital in Beijing and Beijing University of Chinese Medicine aimed to identify biomarkers specific to DILI. To this end, they conducted an untargeted metabolomic analysis of serum and stool samples collected from 32 DILI patients and 36 healthy controls.

Using techniques such as least squares modeling and discriminant analysis, diagnostically promising metabolites and metabolite sets were identified.

The results of the analysis of metabolic pathways in serum and feces suggest that disturbances in bile acid metabolism may underlie the progression of DILI. The study identified 22 overlapping, differentially expressed metabolites in serum and feces, with significant concentration differences between the DILI control group and the healthy control group. Chenodeoxycholic acid and deoxycholic acid, in particular, emerged as promising markers: they not only distinguish DILI patients from healthy individuals but also show potential for predicting the chronic course of DILI.

Future controlled studies should help clarify the causal role of drug administration in bile acid dysregulation and improve the specificity of biomarker identification. Although further work is necessary, these metabolic signatures may complement the early diagnosis and prognosis of DILI. Large-scale, multicenter studies examining biomarker specificity across different liver diseases (e.g., viral hepatitis, alcoholic liver disease, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease) are needed.

Paweł Wernicki (PAP)

pmw/ bar/

The PAP Foundation permits free reprinting of articles from the Nauka w Polsce website, provided that you notify us by email once a month of your use of the website and cite the source of the article. On portals and websites, please include the linked address: Source: naukawpolsce.pl, and in journals, please include the annotation: Source: Nauka w Polsce website - naukawpolsce.pl. This permission does not apply to information in the "World" category or any photographs or video materials.

  • Błonia, Kraków; source: Adobe Stock
  • Source: Adobe Stock

Before adding a comment, please read the Forum Rules of the Nauka w Polsce website.

Dear Reader, In accordance with the Regulation (EU) of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 April 2016 on the protection of natural persons with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data, and repealing Directive 95/46/EC (General Data Protection Regulation), we hereby inform you about the processing of your data. The data controller is the PAP Foundation, with its registered office in Warsaw at ul. Bracka 6/8, 00-502 Warsaw. This data is collected as part of your use of our services, including websites, services, and other functionalities provided by the PAP Foundation, primarily stored in cookies and other online identifiers installed on our websites by us and our trusted partners of the PAP Foundation. The collected data is used solely for the following purposes: • providing services electronically • detecting abuse of services

• statistical measurements and service improvement

The legal basis for data processing is the provision and improvement of services, as well as ensuring security, which constitutes the legitimate interest of the controller. Data may be shared, at the request of the controller, with entities authorized to obtain data under applicable law. Data subjects have the right to access, rectify, and erase data, and to restrict their processing. They may also withdraw consent to the processing of their personal data.

Please send all notifications regarding personal data protection to [email protected] or in writing to the PAP Foundation, ul. Bracka 6/8, 00-502 Warsaw, with the note "personal data protection"

More information about the processing of personal data and your rights can be found in the Privacy Policy. Learn more. I consent

naukawpolsce.pl

naukawpolsce.pl

Similar News

All News
Animated ArrowAnimated ArrowAnimated Arrow