Introduction: Prior small studies have suggested that patients with prior metabolic and bariatric surgery (MBS) may have increased susceptibility to acetaminophen (APAP)-related acute liver failure/acute liver injury (ALF/ALI). The aim of this study was to compare the presentation, etiology, and outcome of adult ALI/ALF patients who were enrolled in a prospective registry study with prior bariatric surgery to those without.
Methods: Among 3,364 ALF/ALI patients in the Acute Liver Failure Study Group registry enrolled between January 1998 and August 2019, 85 (2.3%) reported prior MBS. On review, 6 cases were deemed not ALF and excluded from the analysis.
Results: Among the 79 MBS ALF/ALI patients, 95% were female and 86% were White. Etiology included APAP-related ALF/ALI in 78.5% of the MBS group vs 49.3% in the non-MBS group ( P < 0.001). The proportion of patients with MBS increased from 1.6% (1998-2008) to 3.4% in the later years (2009-2019) ( P < 0.001). There were proportionately more unintentional overdoses in the MBS cohort (71% vs 52%, P < 0.001) with smaller median total APAP dose ingestion (6,500 mg vs 12,000 mg, P = 0.009). Although MBS patients had more severe encephalopathy at presentation, overall, 21-day and transplant-free survival between the groups were similar.
Discussion: ALF/ALI is more frequent in MBS patients than in the general population. APAP toxicity is the most common cause in MBS patients but not the only diagnosis observed. MBS may predispose to severe unintentional APAP liver injury at lower doses. Both MBS patients and providers should be aware regarding this potential risk of increased susceptibility to APAP hepatotoxicity.
Keywords: acetaminophen; acute liver failure/injury; bariatric surgery.
Copyright © 2025 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of The American College of Gastroenterology.