Confirmed Fatal Colchicine Poisoning in an Adolescent with Blood and Bile Concentrations—Implications for GI Decontamination?

Journal of Medical Toxicology - Tập 19 - Trang 280-283 - 2023
Joshua Trebach1, Molly Boyd2, Andres Crane2, Phil DiSalvo3, Rana Biary4, Robert S. Hoffman4, Mark K. Su5
1Division of Medical Toxicology, Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, USA
2Albany Medical Center Department of Emergency Medicine and Medical Toxicology, Albany, USA
3Carle Foundation Hospital, Urbana, USA
4Division of Medical Toxicology, Ronald O. Perelman Department of Emergency Medicine, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, New York, USA
5New York City Poison Control Center, Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, New York, USA

Tóm tắt

Colchicine is commonly used to treat diseases like acute gouty arthritis. However, colchicine has a very narrow therapeutic index, and ingestions of > 0.5mg/kg can be deadly. We report a fatal acute colchicine overdose in an adolescent. Blood and postmortem bile colchicine concentrations were obtained to better understand the degree of enterohepatic circulation of colchicine. A 13-year-old boy presented to the emergency department after acute colchicine poisoning. A single dose of activated charcoal was administered early but no other doses were attempted. Despite aggressive interventions such as exchange transfusion and veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA-ECMO), the patient died 8 days later. Postmortem histology was notable for centrilobular necrosis of the liver and a cardiac septal microinfarct. The patient’s blood colchicine concentration on hospital days 1 (~30 hours post-ingestion), 5, and 7 was 12ng/mL, 11ng/mL, and 9.5ng/mL, respectively. A postmortem bile concentration obtained during autopsy was 27ng/mL. Humans produce approximately 600mL of bile daily. Assuming that activated charcoal would be able to adsorb 100% of biliary colchicine, using the bile concentration obtained above, only 0.0162mg of colchicine per day would be able to be adsorbed and eliminated by activated charcoal in this patient. Despite supportive care, activated charcoal, VA-ECMO, and exchange transfusion, modern medicine may not be enough to prevent death in severely poisoned colchicine patients. Although targeting enterohepatic circulation with activated charcoal to enhance elimination of colchicine sounds attractive, the patient’s low postmortem bile concentration of colchicine suggests a limited role of activated charcoal in enhancing elimination of a consequential amount of colchicine.

Tài liệu tham khảo

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