Grifola frondosa Extract Induced Acute Hepatic Injury

Ramalingam Sridevi

Wright State University School of Medicine, Dayton, Ohio, USA.

Patel Trupti

Kettering Medical Center, Graduate Medical Education Department, Kettering, Ohio, USA.

Calvo Alejandro *

Kettering Cancer and Blood Specialists – Kettering Physicians Network, Kettering, Ohio, USA.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

Aim: To describe a case of acute hepatic injury related to the use of Grifola frondosa in a patient with colon cancer.
Case Presentation: Patient is a 67 year old female with stage IV poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma of the colon, who presented with epigastric pain one month after resection of her primary tumor. A staging PET scan revealed metastasis to regional lymph nodes without solid organ involvement. Her home medications include longstanding amlodipine and losartan, and a recently started Grifola frondosa derivative. Her laboratory data was significant only for acute transaminitis (AST:967 U/L, ALT:768 U/L) without hyperbilirubinemia. Alcohol, acetaminophen, and a viral panel (EBV, CMV, hepatitis A/B/C) were all negative. A CT scan revealed heterogenous liver parenchyma without focal lesions. A subsequent liver biopsy demonstrated active portal inflammation with eosinophilic infiltration.
Discussion: The etiologies of significant acute transaminitis include viral hepatitis, ischemic liver injury, acetaminophen toxicity and drug-induced liver injury (DILI). Viral and ischemic hepatitis and acetaminophen toxicity were excluded based on laboratory analysis and imaging studies. Liver biopsy findings demonstrating the characteristic eosinophilic infiltration of a drug reaction favored DILI as the etiology of transaminitis in this case. With a RUCAM score of 7 calculated based on history, clinical course, and objective data, DILI was concluded to be probably attributed to the patient’s recent use of the Grifola frondosa extract.
Conclusion: A diagnosis of drug induced liver injury probably secondary to the use of Grifola frondosa extract was made after excluding all other causes of significant acute transaminitis.

Keywords: Grifola frondosa, Maitake mushroom, acute hepatic injury, drug induced liver injury.


How to Cite

Sridevi, Ramalingam, Patel Trupti, and Calvo Alejandro. 2013. “Grifola Frondosa Extract Induced Acute Hepatic Injury”. Journal of Advances in Medicine and Medical Research 4 (7):1567-76. https://doi.org/10.9734/BJMMR/2014/5263.

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