The Philippine Children’s Medical Center Journal 2024;20(1):46-58

A systematic review on the effectiveness of N-acetylcysteine in children with dengue-associated liver injury

DJ G. Leaño ; Meadina G. Cruz

Keywords

Dengue Associated Liver Injury; Dengue Hepatitis

Country

Philippines

Language

English

Abstract

Objectives:This study aimed to determine the effectiveness of N-acetylcysteine (NAC) in reversal of liver enzyme abnormalities among pediatric patients with dengue induced liver injury.

Materials and Methods:The preferred reporting items for systematic review and meta-analysis protocols (PRISMA-P 2020) declaration was used to create this systematic review. The study population included children (<18 years old) diagnosed with dengue-associated Liver Injury and given NAC. The outcome of interest was full recovery. A search was performed in PubMed/MEDLINE, EMBASE, Google Scholar, HERDIN PLUS, WPRIM, clinicaltrials.gov, and Cochrane databases on March 2023. The New Castle-Ottawa Quality Assessment Scale was adapted for risk of bias assessment for cohort studies.

Results:Three case series and one pre-post cohort study published from 2013 to 2022 were included. The studies were of acceptable quality. In two studies with overall 10 pediatric patients given NAC for dengue-related ALF, all recovered without adverse events. In one study with 4 patients given NAC, half survived with their liver function tests returning to normal values. Finally, in one comparative study, the durations of time before the liver function tests returned to normal levels, and the mortality rates between those treated with and without N-acetyl cysteine were not significantly different. All studies reported no occurrence of adverse drug reaction related to NAC.

Conclusion:This systematic review shows limited evidence on the effectiveness of NAC in the reversal of liver enzymes among pediatric patients because of the low incidence of dengue induced liver injury seen in observational studies. Given that NAC is reported by all four studies to be accessible, effective, and with no attributable adverse events, its use can be considered. However, clinicians must still be cautioned given the limited available evidence.