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IT'S ALWAYS COCAINE: A RARE CASE OF LEVAMISOLEINDUCED COCAINE ASSOCIATED VASCULITIS WITH PULMONARY AND RENAL INVOLVEMENT
Journal of General Internal Medicine ; 37:S473, 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-1995839
ABSTRACT
CASE 58 year old woman presents with 1 month of dyspnea and productive cough. She also reported loss of smell and hematuria for 1 week. History was notable for hypertension, COPD, substance abuse, specifically crack cocaine, and unstable housing. On admission she was tachypneic and hypoxic, requiring supplemental O2. Exam revealed bilateral crackles, elevated JVP, and mild lower extremity edema, but no skin changes or rashes. Laboratory studies showed an elevated creatine of 7.9. CT chest imaging showed extensive bilateral ground glass opacities with increased septal lines. Infectious work-up, including SARSCoV-2 PCR, was negative. Dialysis was initiated for new renal failure. To determine the etiology of the renal failure, autoimmune studies were obtained and showed a positive ANA and p-ANCA (1640) and a negative MPO and PR3. Kidney biopsy was consistent with levamisole-induced vasculitis (LIV) from cocaine use. Treatment with steroids was initiated. She was discharged on steroid therapy and outpatient hemodialysis. She had repeated admissions for volume overload due to missed dialysis, and she developed heart failure within the year. She was unable to make appointments to start outpatient rituximab therapy. IMPACT/

DISCUSSION:

Levamisole-induced vasculitis (LIV) is a complication of use of cocaine adulterated with levamisole. Levamisole is an antihelminthic medication with well known immunomodulatory effects. Increasingly used as a cocaine adulterant, it is believed to be a component of over 80% of cocaine samples in the US. Its use is thought to be driven by levamisole's synergistic effect on the dopaminergic effects of cocaine. Levamisole-induced vasculitis is a p-ANCA associated vasculitis associated with long-term use of cocaine mixed with levamisole. It has been reported with both inhaled cocaine and smoking crack cocaine. Levamisole is thought to induce production of autoantibodies including p-ANCA, ANA, and lupus anticoagulant leading to immune complex deposition and secondary hypercoagulability. The most commonly reported presentation is cutaneous purpuric lesions, most notably the ear, tip of the nose, and malar eminence. LIV can occur without skin involvement and renal and pulmonary involvement including nephritis, renal failure, and hypersensitivity pneumonitis, has been reported. LIV with significant organ involvement is often treated with steroids. Additional immunosuppressive therapies including rituximab, cyclophosphamide, and plasmapheresis have been reported in severe cases.

CONCLUSION:

This case illustrates a rare presentation of LIV marked by with renal failure and absence of skin lesions. While the health effects of cocaine are well known, the adverse effects of agents used to cut cocaine are less readily considered. LIV should be considered in a patient with substance use disorder presenting with new vasculitis. As this case illustrates, factors like unstable housing and ongoing substance use disorder can complicate management.
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Full text: Available Collection: Databases of international organizations Database: EMBASE Language: English Journal: Journal of General Internal Medicine Year: 2022 Document Type: Article

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Full text: Available Collection: Databases of international organizations Database: EMBASE Language: English Journal: Journal of General Internal Medicine Year: 2022 Document Type: Article