Abstract

Although voriconazole, a triazole antifungal, is a safe drug, treatment with this agent is associated with certain adverse events such as hepatic, neurologic, and visual disturbances. The current report presents two cases, one a 9-year-old boy and the other a 17-year-old girl, who experienced neurologic side effects associated with voriconazole therapy. Our aim is to remind readers of the side effects of voriconazole therapy in order to prevent unnecessary investigations especially for psychological and ophthalmologic problems. The first case was a 9-year-old boy with cystic fibrosis and invasive aspergillosis that developed photophobia, altered color sensation, and fearful visual hallucination. The second case was a 17-year-old girl with cystic fibrosis and allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis, and she experienced photophobia, fatigue, impaired concentration, and insomnia, when the dose of voriconazole therapy was increased from 12 mg/kg/day to 16 mg/kg/day. The complaints of the two patients disappeared after discontinuation of voriconazole therapy. Our experience in these patients reminded us of the importance of being aware of the neurologic adverse events associated with voriconazole therapy in establishing early diagnosis and initiating prompt treatment. In addition, although serum voriconazole concentration was not measured in the present cases, therapeutic drug monitoring for voriconazole seems to be critically important in preventing neurologic side effects in pediatric patients.

Highlights

  • Voriconazole is a broad-spectrum triazole antifungal agent, which is the drug of first choice in the treatment of invasive aspergillosis in adult patients [1]

  • Voriconazole is the drug of first choice in the treatment of invasive aspergillosis

  • A strong correlation has been suggested between higher voriconazole trough concentrations and neurologic side effects, this still remains controversial [11, 15]

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Summary

Introduction

Voriconazole is a broad-spectrum triazole antifungal agent, which is the drug of first choice in the treatment of invasive aspergillosis in adult patients [1]. In European Union, the drug received approval for use in children aged 2 to 11 years in 2005. Voriconazole is a safe and often well-tolerated drug, it was found to be associated with some adverse effects such as neurotoxicity, visual disturbances, and dermatologic reactions [5, 6]. Reversible visual disturbances including altered color sensation, photophobia, and blurred vision were reported as the most common side effects accounting for 20 to 30% of adverse reactions in patients [7, 8]. The current report presents two patients with visual and neurological symptoms that occurred during voriconazole therapy. The reactions are well-known side effects of voriconazole therapy, we found only a few reports in the literature [9,10,11], and, the present paper highlighted these known but neglected adverse effects of voriconazole

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