Lethal cerebral hemorrhage after ticagrelor intoxication: a specific antidote is urgently needed.
Journal: 2018/June - Clinical Toxicology
ISSN: 1556-9519
Abstract:
BACKGROUND
Ticagrelor is a direct and reversible competitive antagonist of the P2Y12 receptor and inhibits platelet activation. Although adverse bleeding is common, fatal intoxication has never been documented.
METHODS
A 47-year-old man died from a severe cerebral hemorrhage secondary to a fall and cranial trauma 4 d after the massive intake of ticagrelor. Iterative platelet transfusions did not improve his condition. Toxicological analyses by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) revealed high plasma concentrations of ticagrelor (3343 µg/L) and its active metabolite AR-C124910XX (656 µg/L) 10 h after intake. The approximate ingested dose was extrapolated to 1677 mg. Assessment of ADP-induced platelet aggregation and platelet Vasodilator Stimulated Phosphoprotein phosphorylation (VASP), 2 and 3 d after admission, respectively, showed the persistence of platelet inhibition.
CONCLUSIONS
To the best of our knowledge, no prior fatal cases have been reported and documented with both ticagrelor and AR-C124910XX concentrations. Our findings highlight the need for a specific antidote to manage such complications resulting from ticagrelor overdose.
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