Halothane Hepatitis

🔷 Overview:

Halothane hepatitis is a rare, potentially fatal, immune-mediated hepatotoxicity that occurs after exposure to the volatile anesthetic halothane.


1. Classification

There are two types:

Type

Features

Type I (mild)

Transient, asymptomatic elevation in liver enzymes, occurs in up to 20% of patients; resolves spontaneously.

Type II(severe)**

Idiosyncratic, fulminant hepatic failure, associated with high mortality; immune-mediated. Rare (~1 in 10,000–35,000 exposures).



2. Pathophysiology

A. Metabolism of Halothane

  • Primarily metabolized by the liver (~20–25%) via cytochrome P450 (CYP2E1).
  • Produces reactive trifluoroacetylated (TFA) intermediates, especially trifluoroacetyl chloride.

B. Mechanism of Injury

  • Type II Halothane Hepatitis:
    • TFA binds to liver proteins → forms neoantigens.
    • Triggers a delayed hypersensitivity reaction (Type II/IV).
    • Results in immune-mediated hepatocyte destruction.
    • Genetic predisposition (e.g., HLA haplotypes) likely plays a role.


3. Risk Factors

Risk Factor

Notes

Repeated exposure

Especially within a short interval (e.g., 3–6 weeks)

Middle-aged females

Especially obese women

Obesity

Possibly related to increased metabolism or fat solubility

Genetic predisposition

Certain HLA alleles linked

Autoimmune disorders

May increase susceptibility

Enzyme induction (CYP2E1)

E.g., alcohol, isoniazid



4. Clinical Features

  • Onset: 2–14 days post-anesthesia (often ~5–10 days).
  • Symptoms:
    • Fever, malaise, anorexia
    • Jaundice
    • Right upper quadrant pain
    • Hepatomegaly
    • May progress to fulminant hepatic failure, coagulopathy, encephalopathy


5. Laboratory Findings

Test

Findings

LFTs

Markedly elevated ALT/AST (>>1000 IU/L), ↑ bilirubin, ↑ ALP

PT/INR

Prolonged

Eosinophilia

Sometimes present

Serology

Negative viral markers

Autoantibodies

May have anti-TFA antibodies

Liver biopsy

Centrilobular necrosis, eosinophilic infiltration



6. Diagnosis

  • Clinical diagnosis based on history of halothane exposure, symptoms, exclusion of other causes (viral, alcoholic, ischemic hepatitis).
  • Anti-TFA antibodies are supportive but not always available.
  • Liver biopsy if needed for confirmation.


7. Management

Step

Approach

Supportive care

ICU admission, monitor LFTs, coagulopathy, encephalopathy

Avoid re-exposure

Halothane must never be used again in such patients

Liver transplant

May be needed in fulminant hepatic failure

Corticosteroids

No proven benefit; sometimes used if autoimmune features dominate

N-acetylcysteine

May be considered though not proven in halothane toxicity



8. Prognosis

  • Type I: Excellent, full recovery.
  • Type II: Mortality up to 50–60% in fulminant cases.


9. Prevention

  • Avoid halothane in adults, especially those with prior exposure.
  • Use safer alternatives: isoflurane, sevoflurane, desflurane have significantly lower hepatic metabolism (sevo <5%, des <0.02%).


10. Comparison with Newer Agents

Agent

Liver Metabolism

Hepatotoxicity Risk

Halothane

~20–25%

High (Type II hepatitis)

Isoflurane

~0.2%

Rare

Sevoflurane

~5%

Very rare (Compound A nephrotoxicity more relevant)

Desflurane

<0.02%

Extremely rare