1. Acute Interstitial Nephritis and Acute Tubular Injury Due to a Transdermal Loxoprofen Patch.
- Author
-
Shinzato T, Ohara K, Kaminaga H, Sugase T, Masuda T, Nagata D, Saki K, Kinoshita Y, Kubo T, Shimizu T, Nanmoku K, and Yagisawa T
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Japan, Male, Acute Kidney Injury chemically induced, Acute Kidney Injury physiopathology, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal adverse effects, Kidney Diseases drug therapy, Nephritis, Interstitial chemically induced, Nephritis, Interstitial physiopathology, Phenylpropionates adverse effects, Transdermal Patch adverse effects
- Abstract
A transdermal patch formulation of a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) used by a 44-year-old man resulted in acute interstitial nephritis and acute tubular injury. This patient also had a history of mild kidney dysfunction and osteoporosis. The NSAID patch had been prescribed after a traffic accident. He was also receiving a vitamin D analog and taking over-the-counter calcium supplements. Two months later, renal dysfunction and hypercalcemia were discovered. A renal biopsy showed acute interstitial nephritis and acute tubular injury. Once these agents were withdrawn, the renal function recovered. This is the first reported occurrence of biopsy-proven acute interstitial nephritis attributable to NSAID patch usage.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF