Fatal lactic acidosis possibly related to ganciclovir therapy in a renal transplant patient?

Indian J Crit Care Med. 2015 Mar;19(3):177-9. doi: 10.4103/0972-5229.152772.

Abstract

Ganciclovir is widely prescribed in renal transplant patients for the prevention or treatment of herpes and cytomegalovirus (CMV) infections. Side-effects are usually represented by hematological disorders, and particularly leucopenia. We report a case of severe and fatal lactic acidosis developing in a 76-year-old renal transplant woman, a few days after ganciclovir has been introduced to treat CMV pneumonia. Usual etiologies of lactic acidosis were ruled out. A high lactate/pyruvate molecular ratio was suggestive of a respiratory chain dysfunction. With the analogy to nucleoside analogues-related lactic acidosis, we suggest that ganciclovir may exceptionally be responsible for respiratory chain dysfunction and subsequent lactic acidosis, and we discuss potential risk factors in our patient.

Keywords: Ganciclovir; lactic acidosis; renal transplant.

Publication types

  • Case Reports