| Literature DB >> 28066243 |
Kuntheavy Ing Lorenzini1, Youssef Daali1, Pierre Fontana2, Jules Desmeules1, Caroline Samer1.
Abstract
We report a patient who presented a non-ST segment elevation myocardial infarction in the context of severe normocytic hypochromic anemia related to gastrointestinal bleeding, 3 months after switching anticoagulant from the vitamin K antagonist acenocoumarol to the direct oral anticoagulant rivaroxaban. High levels of both anti-Xa activity and rivaroxaban plasma concentrations were measured despite rivaroxaban withdrawal, suggesting reduced elimination/drug clearance. Estimated half-life was 2-3 times longer than usually reported. The patient is a homozygous carrier of ABCB1 variant alleles, which could have participated to reduced elimination of rivaroxaban. Furthermore, CYP3A4/5 phenotyping showed moderately reduced enzyme activity. Drug-drug interaction with simvastatin may have contributed to decreased rivaroxaban elimination. Although in the present case moderate acute renal failure probably played a role, more clinical data are required to elucidate the impact of ABCB1 polymorphism on rivaroxaban pharmacokinetics and bleeding complications.Entities:
Keywords: ABCB1; CYP3A4/5; adverse drug reaction; direct oral anticoagulants; drug-drug interaction; genetic polymorphism
Year: 2016 PMID: 28066243 PMCID: PMC5165251 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2016.00494
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Anti-Xa activity and rivaroxaban plasma concentrations.
| Time after the lastrivaroxaban dose | Anti-Xa activity (ng/ml) | Rivaroxaban plasmaconcentrations (ng/ml) |
|---|---|---|
| 24 h | 231 | not performed |
| 48 h | 110 | 88.3 |
| 60 h | 81 | not performed |
| 72 h | 66 | 70.5 |
| 84 h | 66 | not performed |
| 96 h | 34 | 35.6 |