4.4 Article

Ertapenem-induced neurotoxicity in an end-stage renal disease patient on intermittent haemodialysis: a case report

Journal

BMC NEPHROLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12882-022-02980-8

Keywords

Case report; Ertapenem; Neurotoxicity; CKD 5D

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Carbapenem-induced neurotoxicity, especially with ertapenem, can lead to serious central nervous system toxicity in patients with chronic kidney disease. Proper dosing adjustment and clinical studies are needed to ensure antibiotic safety in these patients.
Background Carbapenem-induced neurotoxicity is an unusual side effect, with seizure being the most commonly reported symptom. Among the carbapenems, imipenem-cilastin is classically associated with the most severe neurotoxicity side effects. Carbapenem is mainly excreted by the kidney and its half-life is significantly increased in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Therefore, dose adjustment is necessary in such patients. Ertapenem-associated neurotoxicity is increasingly being reported in CKD patients, but rarely seen in patients with recommended dose adjustment. Case presentation We report a case of a 56-year-old male patient with chronic kidney disease 5 on dialysis(CKD 5D). The patient presented with a history of fever, chills and rigours during a session of haemodialysis (HD). He was diagnosed with Enterobacter cloacae catheter-related blood stream infection and was started on ertapenem. After 13 days of ertapenem, he experienced an acute confusional state and progressed to having auditory and visual hallucinations. His blood investigations and imaging results revealed no other alternative diagnosis. Hence a diagnosis of ertapenem-induced neurotoxicity was made. He had complete resolution of symptoms after 10 days' discontinuation of ertapenem. Conclusion Our case draws attention to the risk of potentially serious toxicity of the central nervous system in HD patients who receive the current recommended dose of ertapenem. It also highlights that renal dosing in CKD 5D patients' needs to be clinically studied to ensure antibiotic safety.

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