AI Article Synopsis

  • A 46-year-old man with chronic hepatitis C developed rhabdomyolysis after starting a triple therapy including telaprevir and simvastatin.
  • Drug-drug interactions were suspected, specifically between telaprevir and simvastatin, leading to an extreme increase in simvastatin levels and resulting muscle toxicity.
  • The patient was treated successfully, and after two weeks in the hospital, his condition improved, highlighting the importance of monitoring potential interactions between medications like telaprevir and statins.

Article Abstract

A 46-year old man with a chronic hepatitis C virus infection received triple therapy with ribavirin, pegylated interferon and telaprevir. The patient also received simvastatin. One month after starting the antiviral therapy, the patient was admitted to the hospital because he developed rhabdomyolysis. At admission simvastatin and all antiviral drugs were discontinued because toxicity due to a drug-drug interaction was suspected. The creatine kinase peaked at 62,246 IU/L and the patient was treated with intravenous normal saline. The patient's renal function remained unaffected. Fourteen days after hospitalization, creatine kinase level had returned to 230 IU/L and the patient was discharged. Telaprevir was considered the probable causative agent of an interaction with simvastatin according to the Drug Interaction Probability Scale. The interaction is due to inhibition of CYP3A4-mediated simvastatin clearance. Simvastatin plasma concentration increased 30 times in this patient and statin induced muscle toxicity is related to the concentration of the statin in blood. In conclusion, with this case we illustrate that telaprevir as well as statins are susceptible to clinical relevant drug-drug interactions.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

hepatitis virus
8
patient treated
8
creatine kinase
8
iu/l patient
8
patient
6
simvastatin
6
rhabdomyolysis hepatitis
4
virus infected
4
infected patient
4
telaprevir
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!