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Tokai Journal of Experimental and Clinical Medicine 2018-Apr

Raltegravir-associated Diabetic Ketoacidosis in a Patient with HIV Infection: A Case Report.

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Mari Horikawa
Masao Toyoda
Nobumichi Saito
Moritsugu Kimura
Takako Kobayashi
Atsushi Takagi
Masafumi Fukagawa

Keywords

Abstract

Antiretroviral drugs, especially protease inhibitors (PI), are known to induce disorders of lipid and glucose metabolism. However, there are only a few reports of these side effects in patients treated with integrase strand transfer inhibitors (INSTI). We encountered the case of a 46-year-old man who had been treated for type 2 diabetes with diet and exercise. He contracted immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection two years earlier and received highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). Three months before the current admission, HAART was switched from a non-nucleic acid reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) to an INSTI (raltegravir: 800 mg/day). He developed diabetic ketoacidosis and was admitted for treatment. The state of health prior to admission was not well documented but he showed no clinical signs of acute infection. Accordingly, diabetic ketoacidosis was considered to be associated with INSTI. Diabetic ketoacidosis was treated appropriately and blood glucose level was controlled with medications before discharge from the hospital. Although the present case does not provide direct evidence for raltegravir-induced diabetic ketoacidosis, we caution physicians about the potential of such side effect associated with the use of INSTI.

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