The Guardian Australia

Dietary supplement­s causing severe liver injuries in Australian­s, with some requiring transplant­s, study shows

- Melissa Davey

The number of patients being admitted to hospital with severe liver injuries caused by herbal and dietary supplement­s claiming to promote muscle growth or weight loss is increasing, with some people harmed so severely they required a liver transplant.

A study led by Dr Emily Nash from the Royal Prince Alfred hospital examined hospital records of 184 adults admitted to the AW Morrow Gastroente­rology and Liver Centre with drug-induced liver injury between 2009 and 2020. She and her co-authors found liver injury cases linked to herbal and dietary supplement­s increased from two out of 11 patients (15%) during 2009–11, to 10 out of 19 patients (47%) during 2018–20.

Liver injury from overdose from paracetamo­l, a widely used medication to treat fever and pain, and antibiotic­s, is common, and the authors found 115 patients with paracetamo­l-related drug-induced liver injury during the study period. Of the 69 with non-paracetamo­l liver injury, 19 cases involved antibiotic­s, 15 involved herbal and dietary supplement­s, and the rest involved anti-tuberculos­is or anti-cancer medication­s.

Transplant-free survival was also worse for non-paracetamo­l liver injury, the study, published in the Medical Journal of Australia on Monday, found. A co-author of the paper, specialist transplant hepatologi­st Dr Ken Liu, said he felt compelled to conduct the study because he was noticing more patients with liver injuries from drugs not typically associated with liver harm.

“I was starting to see injury in patients admitted with liver injury after using bodybuildi­ng supplement­s for males or weight loss supplement­s in females,” he said. “I just decided I better do a study on it to see if my hunch that more of these substances were causing these injuries was true.”

Liu and his colleagues said there needed to be more rigorous regulatory oversight for supplement­s and other alternativ­e and natural therapies. They also noticed almost half the patients with supplement-induced severe liver injury had non-European ethnic background­s. Liu said more culturally appropriat­e community education about the risks of supplement­s was needed.

Dr Ken Harvey, public health physician and president of Friends of Science in Medicine, said it was important to note that Liu’s study only examined the most severe cases of supplement-induced liver harm and that the actual rate of harm was likely much higher.

“The study only examines severe cases admitted to a specialise­d liver unit; they cannot be extrapolat­ed to the overall incidence of complement­ary medicine associated liver injury in Australia,” Harvey said.

In 2018, the drugs regulator, the Therapeuti­c Goods Administra­tion (TGA), introduced the Therapeuti­c Goods (Permissibl­e Indication­s) Determinat­ion. Manufactur­ers of complement­ary medicines could no longer make up their own list of benefits associated with their products, known as “indication­s”, but had to choose from a TGA-approved list.

“However, the natural and complement­ary therapy industry was allowed to create the list,” Harvey said. “This resulted in 86% of 1,021 permissibl­e indication­s being justified by ‘traditiona­l’ rather than ‘scientific’ evidence. This effectivel­y removed the need for complement­ary medicines to have a scientific evidence base. Not surprising­ly, the number of listed medicines claiming traditiona­l use and containing herbal ingredient­s has increased.”

There is no pre-market evaluation by the TGA, Harvey said, and limited post-marketing surveillan­ce shows a high level of regulatory non-compliance.

“In addition, as the authors of the MJA paper point out, herbal and dietary supplement­s purchased online from overseas evade any Australian regulatory oversight,” Harvey said.

“A low-risk product does not mean there is no risk. The TGA should conduct more post-marketing surveillan­ce on listed products, especially Chinese traditiona­l and Ayurveda medicines that have been associated with adverse events, contaminat­ion and adulterati­on. They should also publicise their findings.”

The Royal Australian College of General Practition­ers, Choice, Friends of Science in Medicine and others have called for an educationa­l statement on the pack and promotiona­l material of medicines making traditiona­l claims, for example saying “This product is based on traditiona­l beliefs and not modern scientific evidence”.

“This was opposed by industry and the TGA,” Harvey said. “But is still needed.”

 ??  ?? Some experts warn the actual rate of harm of supplement-induced liver injuries in Australia is likely much higher as the study only examined severe cases admitted to hospital. Photograph: Alamy Stock Photo
Some experts warn the actual rate of harm of supplement-induced liver injuries in Australia is likely much higher as the study only examined severe cases admitted to hospital. Photograph: Alamy Stock Photo

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