Author/Authors :
Sheng, Ying Kun Zhejiang Chinese Medicine University - Hangzhou, China , Zhang, Lu Zhejiang Chinese Medicine University - Hangzhou, China , Hong, Yin Zhejiang Chinese Medicine University - Hangzhou, China
Abstract :
Context: The therapeutic effect, the optimal treatment time, and the dose of silymarin for preventing anti-tuberculosis and antipsychotic
drug-induced liver injury (anti-TB/antipsychotic DILI) remains controversial. We conducted the first systematic review and
meta-analysis study to evaluate the clinical efficacy of silymarin in the treatment of anti-TB/antipsychotic DILI in several subgroups
based on follow-up time and dose.
Evidence Acquisition: We searched the keywords and free words of “silymarin (silibinin)” and “Anti-tuberculosis or antipsychotic
drug-induced liver injury” in PubMed,Web of Science, Cochrane, Scopus, and clinicaltrials.gov for full text English articles and China
Journal Full-text Database (CNKI) and China Medical Bio-Document Database (CBM) for full text Chinese articles. The searched papers
were reserved for randomized controlled trials (RCTs). The Jadad quality scale was used to conduct quality assessments. Two
observers (SY and HY) independently extracted the data. MD and or values were calculated to evaluate the clinical efficacy of silymarin
in anti-TB/antipsychotic DILI. The Q test and chi-square test were used for heterogeneity analysis.
Results: Nine RCTs with 2,712 participants (1,351 in the silymarin group and 1,361 in the control group) satisfying the inclusion criteria
were finally examined. Compared to the placebo group, silymarin at less than 300 mg/d dose significantly reduced the occurrence
of anti-TB/antipsychotic DILI and serum liver enzymes AST and ALT whether for two weeks, four weeks, or eight weeks [pooled OR:
0.53, 95% CI: 0.35 - 0.78, P = 0.42, I2 = 3%; pooled MD: -4.47, 95% CI: -7.00, -1.93, P = 0.70, I2 = 0%, AST; pooled MD: -3.50, 95% CI: -6.08, -0.91, P
= 0.58, I2 = 0%, ALT]. However, no significant difference was found in serum liver enzyme TBIL compared to the control group [pooled
MD: -0.02, 95% CI: -0.07, -0.04, P = 0.69, I2 = 0%]. Silymarin at 315 mg/d significantly reduced the occurrence of anti-TB/antipsychotic
DILI and serum liver enzymes AST, ALT, and TBIL for eight weeks [subtotal OR: 0.17, 95% CI: 0.08 - 0.39, I2 = 76%] but no significant
difference was found between the over 400 mg/d silymarin group and the control group [subtotal OR: 0.93, 95% CI: 0.20 - 4.39, I2 =
76%]. No significant difference was found in the occurrence of adverse events compared to the control group [pooled OR: 0.94, 95%
CI: 0.71 - 1.25, I2 = 0%]. Compared to the control group, silymarin prolonged the occurrence of anti-TB/antipsychotic DILI [pooled SMD:
1.78, 95% CI: 1.65 - 1.91, I2 = 42%].
Conclusions: Silymarin prolonged the occurrence of anti-TB/antipsychotic DILI and reduced the incidence of anti-TB/antipsychotic
DILI without significant adverse effects. The optimal treatment time of silymarin to prevent anti-TB/antipsychotic DILI was related
to its dose.
Keywords :
Anti-Tubercular Agents , Antipsychotic , China , Drug-Induced Liver Injury , Liver Function Tests , Silybin , Silymarin , Systematic Review , Treatment Outcome