Falsely Elevated Tacrolimus (FK506) Trough Levels in a Liver Transplant Recipient
Recommended Citation
Garg N, Mo J, Fitzmaurice MG, Warnke S, and Jafri SM. Falsely Elevated Tacrolimus (FK506) Trough Levels in a Liver Transplant Recipient. Cureus 2024; 16(2):e54548.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-1-2024
Publication Title
Cureus
Abstract
Antibody-conjugated magnetic immunoassay (ACMIA) for tacrolimus (FK506) may detect falsely elevated tacrolimus trough levels, a commonly underreported event. We report a case of falsely elevated whole-blood tacrolimus levels in a patient post-orthotopic liver transplantation. A 71-year-old male patient underwent liver transplantation in 2012. Post-transplantation, the patient was immediately started on tacrolimus for maintenance immunosuppression. His most recent dose was 0.5 mg four times weekly. During monitoring, trough levels were at 25.9 ng/mL using ACMIA. After this result, a decision was made to hold tacrolimus. After holding tacrolimus for seven days, detected trough levels were still continually greater than 20 ng/mL. Upon suspicion of falsely elevated results, liquid chromatography with mass spectroscopy (LC-MS) was used to check tacrolimus trough levels. Results showed normal trough levels of 7.6 ng/mL. Because of its narrow therapeutic window, tacrolimus levels need to be carefully monitored throughout treatment. When high tacrolimus levels are detected using ACMIA without a correlating clinical scenario, trough levels should be re-confirmed using LC-MS to prevent clinical decisions from being made based on falsely elevated results.
PubMed ID
38516431
Volume
16
Issue
2
First Page
54548
Last Page
54548