1. Levodopa/dopa decarboxylase inhibitor associated microscopic colitis: An under-recognized drug reaction.
- Author
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Ong TL, Dal S, Martin AJ, Chang FC, Williams LJ, Babu S, Mahant N, Morales-Briceno H, Fletcher N, Nankervis J, Robbie M, and Fung VSC
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Carbidopa, Cohort Studies, Drug Combinations, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Antiparkinson Agents adverse effects, Benserazide adverse effects, Colitis, Microscopic chemically induced, Enzyme Inhibitors adverse effects, Levodopa adverse effects, Parkinson Disease drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Microscopic colitis is a form of inflammatory bowel disease characterized by profuse non-bloody watery diarrhea. Macroscopic abnormality is not present on colonoscopy, and it requires biopsy for diagnosis. Few cases have been attributed to levodopa/dopa-decarboxylase inhibitor therapy., Method: A retrospective cohort study of 21 patients on levodopa/benserazide and one patient on levodopa-carbidopa intestinal gel with clinically suspected or biopsy proven microscopic colitis., Results: All 21 patients on oral levodopa/benserazide had resolution of diarrhea with cessation of the medication. Four patients discontinued levodopa permanently. Two were rechallenged with levodopa/benserazide without symptom recurrence. One patient on oral levodopa/carbidopa developed diarrhea only with intermittent dispersible levodopa/benserazide. 14 were switched to levodopa/carbidopa with resolution of diarrhea in 9 but symptom recurrence in 5. One patient on oral levodopa/benserazide developed profuse diarrhea when switched to levodopa-carbidopa intestinal gel. Of 7/22 patients who had colonoscopy and biopsy, 5 had histopathological proven microscopic colitis., Conclusion: levodopa/dopa-decarboxylase inhibitor induced microscopic colitis may be more common than previously suspected, with the potential to affect treatment compliance and therapeutic options., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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