Renal Allograft Dysfunction Possibly Caused by Amiodarone Nephrotoxicity: a Case-Report

Amiodarone is a potent inhibitor of CYP3A4 and can increase serum concentrations of drugs that are substrates of this enzyme system. Immunosuppressive drugs are also metabolized through the cytochrome metabolic pathway what may lead to important drug-drug interactions. A 60-year-old female received...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Basic-Jukic Nikolina, Katalinic Lea, Coric Marijana, Kocman Monika, Krtalic Branimir, Kes Petar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2017-06-01
Series:BANTAO Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/bj.2017.15.issue-1/bj-2017-0010/bj-2017-0010.xml?format=INT
id doaj-8a2caea65db34f62bdb51b1f09272730
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8a2caea65db34f62bdb51b1f092727302020-11-24T22:10:03ZengSciendoBANTAO Journal2451-31052017-06-01151394010.1515/bj-2017-0010bj-2017-0010Renal Allograft Dysfunction Possibly Caused by Amiodarone Nephrotoxicity: a Case-ReportBasic-Jukic Nikolina0Katalinic Lea1Coric Marijana2Kocman Monika3Krtalic Branimir4Kes Petar5Department of nephrology, arterial hypertension, dialysis and transplantation, Oxford, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern IrelandDepartment of nephrology, arterial hypertension, dialysis and transplantation, Oxford, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern IrelandDepartment of pathology, University hospital center, Zagreb, CroatiaDepartment of nephrology, arterial hypertension, dialysis and transplantation, Oxford, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern IrelandDepartment of nephrology, arterial hypertension, dialysis and transplantation, Oxford, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern IrelandDepartment of nephrology, arterial hypertension, dialysis and transplantation, Oxford, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern IrelandAmiodarone is a potent inhibitor of CYP3A4 and can increase serum concentrations of drugs that are substrates of this enzyme system. Immunosuppressive drugs are also metabolized through the cytochrome metabolic pathway what may lead to important drug-drug interactions. A 60-year-old female received her second allograft from the deceased donor and was treated with tacrolimus, mycophenolate mofetil and steroids. Amiodarone was introduced for treatment of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation four days after the transplantation. One month after the discharge she was readmitted to hospital for evaluation of the creeping creatinine. Biopsy showed borderline acute rejection. She received 3 boluses of 6- methilprednisolone but creatinine continued to rise. Repeated biopsy was without signs of rejection with mild interstitial fibrosis/tubular atrophy, mild global glomerulosclerosis and moderate arterial sclerosis. However, tubular vacuolization was prominent. After careful revision of her therapy we decided to replace amiodarone with sotalol. One week later her creatinine fell from 350 to 220 μmol/l and remained stable. This case illustrates possible amiodarone nephrotoxicity in a renal transplant recipient. We suggest that patients who need amiodarone in combination with tacrolimus be closely monitored by both cardiologists and nephrologists, with frequent determinations of tacrolimus trough levels and serum creatinine measurements.http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/bj.2017.15.issue-1/bj-2017-0010/bj-2017-0010.xml?format=INTtacrolimusamiodaroneinteractionrenal transplantationnephrotoxicity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Basic-Jukic Nikolina
Katalinic Lea
Coric Marijana
Kocman Monika
Krtalic Branimir
Kes Petar
spellingShingle Basic-Jukic Nikolina
Katalinic Lea
Coric Marijana
Kocman Monika
Krtalic Branimir
Kes Petar
Renal Allograft Dysfunction Possibly Caused by Amiodarone Nephrotoxicity: a Case-Report
BANTAO Journal
tacrolimus
amiodarone
interaction
renal transplantation
nephrotoxicity
author_facet Basic-Jukic Nikolina
Katalinic Lea
Coric Marijana
Kocman Monika
Krtalic Branimir
Kes Petar
author_sort Basic-Jukic Nikolina
title Renal Allograft Dysfunction Possibly Caused by Amiodarone Nephrotoxicity: a Case-Report
title_short Renal Allograft Dysfunction Possibly Caused by Amiodarone Nephrotoxicity: a Case-Report
title_full Renal Allograft Dysfunction Possibly Caused by Amiodarone Nephrotoxicity: a Case-Report
title_fullStr Renal Allograft Dysfunction Possibly Caused by Amiodarone Nephrotoxicity: a Case-Report
title_full_unstemmed Renal Allograft Dysfunction Possibly Caused by Amiodarone Nephrotoxicity: a Case-Report
title_sort renal allograft dysfunction possibly caused by amiodarone nephrotoxicity: a case-report
publisher Sciendo
series BANTAO Journal
issn 2451-3105
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Amiodarone is a potent inhibitor of CYP3A4 and can increase serum concentrations of drugs that are substrates of this enzyme system. Immunosuppressive drugs are also metabolized through the cytochrome metabolic pathway what may lead to important drug-drug interactions. A 60-year-old female received her second allograft from the deceased donor and was treated with tacrolimus, mycophenolate mofetil and steroids. Amiodarone was introduced for treatment of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation four days after the transplantation. One month after the discharge she was readmitted to hospital for evaluation of the creeping creatinine. Biopsy showed borderline acute rejection. She received 3 boluses of 6- methilprednisolone but creatinine continued to rise. Repeated biopsy was without signs of rejection with mild interstitial fibrosis/tubular atrophy, mild global glomerulosclerosis and moderate arterial sclerosis. However, tubular vacuolization was prominent. After careful revision of her therapy we decided to replace amiodarone with sotalol. One week later her creatinine fell from 350 to 220 μmol/l and remained stable. This case illustrates possible amiodarone nephrotoxicity in a renal transplant recipient. We suggest that patients who need amiodarone in combination with tacrolimus be closely monitored by both cardiologists and nephrologists, with frequent determinations of tacrolimus trough levels and serum creatinine measurements.
topic tacrolimus
amiodarone
interaction
renal transplantation
nephrotoxicity
url http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/bj.2017.15.issue-1/bj-2017-0010/bj-2017-0010.xml?format=INT
work_keys_str_mv AT basicjukicnikolina renalallograftdysfunctionpossiblycausedbyamiodaronenephrotoxicityacasereport
AT kataliniclea renalallograftdysfunctionpossiblycausedbyamiodaronenephrotoxicityacasereport
AT coricmarijana renalallograftdysfunctionpossiblycausedbyamiodaronenephrotoxicityacasereport
AT kocmanmonika renalallograftdysfunctionpossiblycausedbyamiodaronenephrotoxicityacasereport
AT krtalicbranimir renalallograftdysfunctionpossiblycausedbyamiodaronenephrotoxicityacasereport
AT kespetar renalallograftdysfunctionpossiblycausedbyamiodaronenephrotoxicityacasereport
_version_ 1725809591803969536