Enhanced Hepatotoxicity of Acetaminophen in the Alcoholic Patient: Two Case Reports and a Review of the Literature

Abstract
We report 2 fatal cases of the acetaminophen-alcohol syndrome and review 51 reported cases in the medical literature. The MEDLINE database from January 1966 to December 1995 and bibliographies of selected articles were used to obtain the case reports. Inclusion criteria were a clear history of alcohol use, a history of acetaminophen use and/or an elevated serum acetaminophen level, peak aspartate aminotransferase (AST) greater than 800 U/L, and exclusion of other causes of hepatotoxicity by negative hepatitis serologies and/or a liver biopsy showing typical findings of acetaminophen toxicity. Demographic characteristics, clinical features, treatment, and outcome were extracted from reports meeting inclusion criteria and our own 2 cases. This syndrome affected relatively young, frequently healthy patients. Acetaminophen was invariably taken for nonsuicidal intent. The mortality rate was 32%. A typical laboratory picture was defined, characterized by an extraordinarily high AST level. Treatment with N-acetylcysteine was not effective due to delayed presentation and diagnosis. Patients who use alcohol and health care providers should be educated about this potentially fatal syndrome. Prevention is the key to reducing its occurrence.