Case Summary: A 73-year-old man (height, 158.2 cm; weight, 49.8 kg) presented with upper abdominal tenderness after 3 weeks of treatment with 150 mg/d of micafungin (3 mg/kg . d) (Mycamine, Astellas Pharma US Inc., Deerfield, Illinois) intravenously for pulmonary aspergillosis accompanied by [DOSAGE ERROR CORRECTED] pulmonary Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) infection. Pulmonary aspergillosis was noninvasively diagnosed by a fungus lump in a cavity in the right upper lung field with a high value of 1,3-beta-D-glucan and a positive result for aspergillosis antigen. The patient had a medical history of gastrectomy due to gastric cancer and idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP). He had been prescribed 800 mg/d of clarithromycin, 400 mg/dL of rifampicin, and 750 mg/d of ethambutol hydrochloride for pulmonary MAC infection for 2 years and 5 mg/d of prednisolone for ITP for 7 years. No traditional or homeopathic medicine had been received/administered. Laboratory tests at the onset of abdominal pain revealed a white blood cell count of 4300/microL with 51% neutrophils. There was no eosinophilia. Platelet count was 15,100/muL, with normal coagulation. Immunoglobulin G and immunoglobulin M were 1720 and 154 mg/dL, respectively. The patient had no history of allergy, biliary tract disease, hyperlipidemia, or hypercalcemia. He did not report alcohol use. The laboratory findings, magnetic resonance imaging, and upper abdominal tenderness were consistent with acute pancreatitis. After cessation of all drugs, his symptoms improved with bowel rest and parenteral nutrition. His laboratory measurements normalized thereafter. All drugs, except micafungin, were readministered for pulmonary MAC infection and ITP, and itraconazole was administered for pulmonary aspergillosis after the recovery from pancreatitis. During 16 months of follow-up, the pancreatitis did not recur.
Discussion: We performed a literature search of all available English-language articles published on MEDLINE between January 1966 and January 2007 using the key terms micafungin (text and indexed terms) and pancreatitis (text and indexed terms). Based on the search of MEDLINE, there have been no reports of acute pancreatitis associated with micafungin. The Naranjo adverse drug reaction (ADR) probability scale was used to assess the probability of micafungin-associated acute pancreatitis. A score of 6 was obtained, indicating a probable ADR from micafungin treatment.
Conclusion: We report a case of acute pancreatitis probably associated with micafungin use in an elderly patient.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.clinthera.2007.07.012 | DOI Listing |
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