JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
Cyclosporin toxicity at therapeutic blood levels and cytochrome P-450 IIIA
Lucey, Michael R.; Kolars, Joseph C.; Merion, Robert M.; Campbell, Darrell A.; Aldrich, M.; Watkins, P. B.
1990-01-06
Citation:Lucey, M. R., Kolars, J. C., Merion, R. M., Campbell, D. A., Aldrich, M., Watkins, P. B. (1990/01/06)."Cyclosporin toxicity at therapeutic blood levels and cytochrome P-450 IIIA." The Lancet 335(8680): 11-15. <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/28757>
Abstract: A 40-year-old male liver allograft recipient had neurological dysfunction and renal failure while his cyclosporin blood levels were in the therapeutic range; these features recurred on rechallenge. The hypothesis that this toxic effect might have resulted from abnormal metabolism of cyclosporin by liver cytochrome P-450 IIIA was investigated with the [14C]erythromycin breath test, which is a measure of this enzyme's activity. P-450 IIIA activity was decreased compared with that in controls, including other liver transplant recipients. Pretreatment with rifampicin, an inducer of P-450 IIIA, increased enzyme activity. After treatment with rifampicin the patient could be rechallenged with cyclosporin at a dose almost twice that which had previously been toxic. The patient died during a second transplantation and the microsomal content of P-450 IIIA was found to be low in the first transplant.