| Literature DB >> 31078137 |
Abiel Berhe1,2, Mulugeta Russom3, Fithawit Bahran4, Goitom Hagos5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fluoroquinolones have been associated with hypoglycemia in patients taking diabetic medications, most commonly due to drug-drug interactions and other associated risk factors. Except for four published case reports, there are no studies that have found positive associations between ciprofloxacin and hypoglycemia. In all but one of the cases, ciprofloxacin was taken with other hypoglycemic drugs. Recently, the Eritrean National Pharmacovigilance Centre received a serious case of hypoglycemia with recurrent episodes in a young and healthy patient without diabetes following use of oral ciprofloxacin. The aim of the present study is therefore to assess the causal relationship between ciprofloxacin and hypoglycemia in patients without diabetes using the World Health Organization-Uppsala Monitoring Centre global adverse drug reaction database (VigiBase®).Entities:
Keywords: Ciprofloxacin; Hypoglycemia; Nondiabetic patients; VigiBase®
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31078137 PMCID: PMC6511658 DOI: 10.1186/s13256-019-2083-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Fig. 1Inclusion criteria and number of cases retrieved from the global individual case safety reports database
Distribution of cases of hypoglycemia associated with ciprofloxacin, according to background characteristics
| Background characteristics | No. (%) |
|---|---|
| Age at index date | |
| < 45 years | 6 (17) |
| 45–64 years | 12 (34) |
| > 65 years | 17 (49) |
| Median age (IQR) | 64 (50–85) |
| Sex | |
| Male | 18 (51.4) |
| Female | 17 (48.6) |
IQR Interquartile range
Results of causality assessment on ciprofloxacin and hypoglycemia in patients without diabetes using Hill’s criteria
| Criterion | Outcome | |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | Strength of association | IC value was negative (no statistical signal). |
| 2. | Consistency of the cases | Cases of hypoglycemia associated with ciprofloxacin in patients without diabetes have been reported to the WHO global database from different geographical areas. Moreover, there is a similar published case report of hypoglycemia in an elderly patient without diabetes following intake of ciprofloxacin. In many of the cases, hypoglycemia manifested shortly (within 4 days) following used of ciprofloxacin and recovered on de-challenge in a substantial number of cases. |
| 3. | Specificity of the association | In 48.5% of the cases, patients took ciprofloxacin and shortly encountered hypoglycemic episodes without other coreported reactions. |
| 4. | Temporal relationship | The time to reaction onset of hypoglycemia in a majority of the cases was within 4 days following intake of ciprofloxacin and when patients had no history of such events before. This shows that the association had a plausible temporal relationship. |
| 5. | Dose-response relationship | No evidence of dose-response relationship was found on this association. |
| 6. | Biological mechanism or plausibility | The possible mechanism that explains the causal association of ciprofloxacin and hypoglycemia could be increased insulin release via blockade of ATP-sensitive potassium channels in the beta-cells of the pancreas [ |
| 7. | Experimental evidence | Two experimental studies in rat islet cells exposed to quinolones showed increase in insulin secretion via blockade of ATP-dependent potassium channels [ |
| 8. | Analogy | Hypoglycemia is a well-known adverse effect of fluoroquinolones that have structural analogues with ciprofloxacin. |
| 9. | Coherence | Taking into consideration the effect of fluoroquinolones in causing hyperinsulinemia in rat islet cells and the aforementioned preexisting knowledge, the association is coherent with today’s knowledge. |
Abbreviations: ATP Adenosine triphosphate, IC Information component, WHO World Health Organization