| Literature DB >> 28049514 |
Clara Frydrychowicz1, Bastian Pasieka2, Matthias Pierer2, Wolf Mueller3, Sirak Petros2, Lorenz Weidhase2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rhabdomyolysis is a widely recognized yet rare complication in statin use. Rhabdomyolysis might be triggered by the prescription of high doses of statins or by statin accumulation due to interactions with concomitant medication. Muscle cell destruction as evidenced by myoglobin elevation can induce potentially life-threatening acute renal failure. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Anti-HMGCR-antibody; Case report; Colchicine; Rhabdomyolysis; Statin therapy; Statin-associated myopathies (SAM)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28049514 PMCID: PMC5209950 DOI: 10.1186/s13256-016-1169-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Diagnosis of statin-induced myopathy
| Feature | Points |
|---|---|
| Symmetrical myalgia | 1 |
| Occurrence within 4 weeks from the start of statin therapy | 1 |
| Symptoms resolving with withdrawal of therapy | 1 |
| Family history of statin-induced myopathy | 1 |
| Elevation of creatine kinase | 2 |
| Positive re-challenge test | 2 |
| Confirmed rhabdomyolysis | 5 |
| Histological confirmation of statin-induced myopathy | 5 |
Characteristic features allow classification of patients who have a possible statin-induced myopathy (1–2 points), probable statin-induced myopathy (3–4 points), or definite statin-induced myopathy (>5 points) [9]
Patient laboratory data on hospitalization
| Parameter | Value | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| CK | >334 μkat/l | 0.63–2.91 μkat/l |
| Myoglobin | 21896 μg/l | 28–72 μg/l |
| ASAT | 4.54 μkat/l | 0.17–0.85 μkat/l |
| LDH | 22.54 μkat/l | 2.25–3.75 μkat/l |
| Creatinine | 596 μmol/l | 59–104 μmol/l |
| GFR MDRD | 8.7 ml/min | |
| Urea | 50.7 mmol/l | <11.9mmol/l |
| TSH | 0.928 mU/l | 0.4–3.77 mU/l |
ASAT aspartate-aminotransferase, CK creatine kinase, GFR glomerular filtration rate, LDH lactate dehydrogenase, MDRD Modification of Diet in Renal Disease, TSH Thyrotropin
Fig. 1a Skeletal muscle with numerous scattered necrotic fibers (*) without signs of inflammation (hematoxylin and eosin, ×100). b Single skeletal muscle fiber in a state of myophagocytosis (hematoxylin and eosin, ×200); * marks another fresh single fiber necrosis. c Detection of membrane attack complex-positive immune complexes on small vessels (arrowheads), endomysial capillaries, sarcolemma, and cytoplasm in necrotic muscle fibers (*) (membrane attack complex, ×200). d Clear sarcolemmal and cytoplasmic upregulation of major histocompatibility complex class I (major histocompatibility complex-I, ×100)
Fig. 2Timely normalization of myoglobin and creatine kinase levels after initiating supportive therapy (continuous veno-venous hemofiltration) and cessation of simvastatin medication. CK creatine kinase, Myo myoglobin
Colchicine triggered simvastatin-induced myopathy: review of the literature
| Case reports | Age in years | Sex | Muscle symptoms | Simvastatin | Colchicine |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hsu et al. 2002 [ | 70 | M | Symmetrical proximal muscle weakness 3–4/5 |
| 0.5 mg daily |
| Baker et al. 2004 [ | 79 | M | Severe weakness | 40 mg daily | 0.6 mg daily |
| Justiniano et al. 2007 [ | 61 | F | Rhabdomyolysis | 40 mg daily | 0.6 mg daily |
| Sahin et al. 2008 [ | 30 | M | Proximal muscle weakness upper and lower extremities 2–3/5 | 20 mg daily | 1.5 mg daily |
| Oh et al. 2012 [ | 84 | M | Symmetrical proximal muscle weakness | 40 mg daily | 1 mg (first 3 days); 0.5 mg daily |
| Medani and Wall 2016 [ | 60 | M | Muscle weakness 4/5 in all limbs except 5/5 in hip extensor |
| 1.5 mg daily |
| Current case | 70 | M | Rhabdomyolysis | 40 mg daily | 0.5–1 mg as required |
Case reports of concomitant simvastatin and colchicine treatment and development of muscle weakness, including rhabdomyolysis. F female, M male