| Literature DB >> 26613042 |
Julius J Schmidt1, Anna Bertram1, W Nikolaus Kühn-Velten2, Hendrik Suhling3, Olaf Wiesner3, Andrea Schneider4, Jan T Kielstein1.
Abstract
Antidepressants, especially amitriptyline, are among the most frequent drug classes involved in intoxications. Despite its small molecular weight, amitriptyline is not considered to be eliminated by extracorporeal treatment methods due to its high protein binding and large volume of distribution. New high cut-off dialysers have so far not been used for removal of amitriptyline. We report two cases of amitriptyline poisoning in which we measured the amitriptyline elimination using extended high cut-off (HCO) dialysis. Despite dialyser clearances of 33 and 58 mL/min, resulting in the reduction of initial serum concentrations by ∼30%, only 211 and 920 µg of amitryptilin, respectively, (<3% of the ingested amount) could be recovered in the total collected dialysate. Hence, due to the high volume of distribution of amitriptyline, even HCO dialysis does not contribute substantially to the extracorporeal removal of amitryptilin.Entities:
Keywords: acute interstitial nephritis; antidepressants; proton pump inhibitors
Year: 2015 PMID: 26613042 PMCID: PMC4655799 DOI: 10.1093/ckj/sfv094
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Kidney J ISSN: 2048-8505
Relevant case report characteristics recommended by the EXTRIP workgroup [10]
| Case 1 | Case 2 | |
|---|---|---|
| General information | ||
| Age (years) | 54 | 53 |
| Weight (kg) | 54 | 75 |
| Height (cm) | 168 | 157 |
| Gender | ♀ | ♀ |
| Concurrent diseases | Breast cancer, chronic pain syndrome, depression | MGUS, depression, chronic pain syndrome |
| Source providing the history of the poisoning | Paramedics | Paramedics |
| Time from ingestion to hospital admission (h) | 7.5 | 8.5 |
| Known co-medication | Lorazepam | Pantoprazole, citalopram, mirtazapine |
| Other toxins | Tilidine, ethanol | Ibuprofen, β-blockers, alcohol |
| Activated charcoal given | No | Yes |
| ICU stay (days) | 3 | 5 |
| Discharge from hospital (days) | 3 | 20 |
| Laboratory values | ||
| Albumin (g/L) | 34.8 | 42 |
| Creatinine at baseline (µmol/L)/eGFR CKD-EPI | 36/115.3 | 643/6 (AKIN III) |
| Serum amitriptyline peak concentration (µg/L) | 458 | 412 |
| Serum nortipytilin peak concentrations (µg/L) | 283 | 259 |
| Serum tilidine/nortilidin peak concentrations (µg/L) | 56/849 | NA |
| Urine excretion (mL/days) | 3100 | anuria |
| Urine amitriptyline concentration (µg/L) | 623 | NA |
| Haematocrit (%) | 40 | 36.5 |
| ECTR characteristics | ||
| Modality of ECTR | Intermitted haemodialysis | Intermitted haemodialysis |
| Indication for ECTR | Detoxification | AKI, rhabdomyolysis, detoxification |
| ECTR start after admission (h) | 2.5 | 1.5 |
| Dialyser (material/surface)a | HCO dialyser (polysulfone, 1.8 m2) | High-flux dialyser (polysulfone, 1.3 m2) |
| Dialysis time (min) | 295 (first treatment) | 320 (first treatment) |
| Blood flow (mL/min) | 300 (first treatment) | 240 (high-flux) |
| Dialysate flow (mL/min) | 300 (first treatment) | 240 (high-flux) |
| Ultrafiltration rate (mL/h) | 50 | 50 (first treatment)/50 (second treatment)/200 (HCO) |
| Anticoagulation | Heparin | Heparin |
| Amitriptyline reduction ratio (%)b | 27 | 28 (HCO) |
| ECTR amitriptyline clearance (mL/min)c | 58 | 7 (high-flux) |
| Total amount of amitriptyline in the collected dialysate (µg) | 211 | 920 (high-flux) |
AKI, acute kidney injury; AKIN, acute kidney injury network; CKD-EPI, chronic kidney disease epidemiology collaboration; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; HPLC, high-performance liquid chromatography; MS/MS, tandem mass spectrometry.
Amitriptyline and nortriptyline were quantified (detection limit 5 µg/L) by HPLC followed by electrospray ionization and mass spectrometric detection and quantification of selected ion fragments (triple quadrupole MS/MS, API2000, PE Sciex) after simple deproteinization with acetonitrile/methanol. Tilidine and its metabolites were similarly quantified (detection limit 5 µg/L) by HPLC-MS (Waters Micromass, Quattro Micro) after fluid extraction with cyclohexane.
aAdditional membrane characteristics are reported elsewhere [11].
bCalculations of reduction ratios were executed according to equation (1):
cDialyser clearance was measured according to equation (2), using the patients’ hematocrit concentration (Hct) at the time of clearance sampling:
Fig. 1.(a) Time course of plasma concentrations for amitriptyline and tilidine. (b) Time course of amitriptyline and myoglobin concentrations during HCO dialysis treatment. Open triangles denote myoglobin values at the upper laboratory detection range. *Amitriptyline concentration measured in different laboratories.