Abnormally Elevated Blood Tacrolimus Level Following the Concomitant Use of Nirmatrelvir/Ritonavir With Extended-Release Tacrolimus in a Post-lung Transplant Patient: A Case Report and a Literature Review.

Hikari Yoshida, Takumi Umemura, Soichiro Ito, Takahito Mizuno, Yoshikazu Mutoh, Tetsuya Yamada, Tomoki Kimura
Author Information
  1. Hikari Yoshida: Department of Pharmacy, Tosei General Hospital, Seto, JPN.
  2. Takumi Umemura: Department of Pharmacy, Tosei General Hospital, Seto, JPN.
  3. Soichiro Ito: Department of Pharmacy, Tosei General Hospital, Seto, JPN.
  4. Takahito Mizuno: Department of Pharmacy, Tosei General Hospital, Seto, JPN.
  5. Yoshikazu Mutoh: Department of Infectious Diseases, Tosei General Hospital, Seto, JPN.
  6. Tetsuya Yamada: Department of Pharmacy, Tosei General Hospital, Seto, JPN.
  7. Tomoki Kimura: Department of Respiratory Medicine and Allergy, Tosei General Hospital, Seto, JPN.

Abstract

Although Nirmatrelvir/Ritonavir (NMV/r) reportedly increases blood levels of tacrolimus (TAC) due to CYP3A4 inhibition and other factors, reports on the use of NMV/r in combination with tacrolimus hydrate extended-release capsules (TAC-ER) in lung transplant patients are limited. Herein, we present a case with post-lung transplantation of elevated blood trough levels of TAC after concomitant use of NMV/r. A woman in her 60s had undergone lung transplantation. She had coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and was co-administered NMV/r and TAC-ER, with the trough level controlled at approximately 4 ��g/mL. Upon the co-administration of NMV/r and TAC-ER, the Patient developed diarrhea and vomiting and was hospitalized. TAC-ER was discontinued on day 6, and TAC level was measured on day 8 and had risen above 100 ng/mL. This level gradually decreased to 17.8 ng/mL on day 11 and 2.4 ng/mL on day 15; therefore, TAC-ER was resumed at 2.5 mg/day. On day 18, the TAC level was 5.2 ng/mL, which was within the target range, and the Patient was discharged on day 19. This is the first report of a post-lung transplant Patient co-administered TAC-ER with NMV/r, who showed abnormally high blood TAC levels above the detection limit. In patients using TAC-ER after lung transplantation, it may be useful to confirm that the TAC blood level is below the effective therapeutic range before resuming TAC-ER safely.

Keywords

References

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Word Cloud

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