SummaryAdrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) during childhood is a rare malignant tumor that frequently results in glucocorticoid and/or androgen excess. When there are signs of microscopic or macroscopic residual disease, adjuvant therapy is recommended with mitotane, an adrenolytic and cytotoxic drug. In addition to the anticipated side effect of adrenal insufficiency, mitotane is known to cause gynecomastia and hypothyroidism in adults. It has never been reported to cause precocious puberty. A 4-year-old girl presented with a 6-week history of virilization and elevated androgen levels and 1-year advancement in bone age. Imaging revealed a right adrenal mass, which was subsequently surgically excised. Histology revealed ACC with multiple unfavorable features, including high mitotic index, capsular invasion and atypical mitoses. Adjuvant chemotherapy was started with mitotane, cisplatin, etoposide and doxorubicin. She experienced severe gastrointestinal side effects and symptomatic adrenal insufficiency, which occurred despite physiological-dose corticosteroid replacement. She also developed hypothyroidism that responded to treatment with levothyroxine and peripheral precocious puberty (PPP) with progressive breast development and rapidly advancing bone age. Five months after discontinuing mitotane, her adrenal insufficiency persisted and she developed secondary central precocious puberty (CPP). This case demonstrates the diverse endocrine complications associated with mitotane therapy, which contrast with the presentation of ACC itself. It also provides the first evidence that the known estrogenic effect of mitotane can manifest as PPP.Learning points:Adrenocortical carcinoma is an important differential diagnosis for virilization in young childrenMitotane is a chemotherapeutic agent that is used to treat adrenocortical carcinoma and causes adrenal necrosisMitotane is an endocrine disruptor. In addition to the intended effect of adrenal insufficiency, it can cause hypothyroidism, with gynecomastia also reported in adults.Patients taking mitotane require very high doses of hydrocortisone replacement therapy because mitotane interferes with steroid metabolism. This effect persists after mitotane therapy is completedIn our case, mitotane caused peripheral precocious puberty, possibly through its estrogenic effect.
We report the first published case of a drug induced liver injury (DILI) presumed secondary to a drug-drug interaction between ritonavir and levonorgestrel progestogen-only emergency contraception (POEC). Our patient is a 25-year-old female living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), taking antiretroviral therapy (ART) containing tenofovir alafenamide/emtricitabine and darunavir/ritonavir. She was found to have elevated transaminases at a routine clinic appointment consistent with hepatocellular DILI. Further investigation found the most likely cause of this was a drug-drug interaction (DDI) between the ritonavir component of her ART and recent use of levonorgestrel POEC 3 days earlier. Evidence suggests that ritonavir increases levonorgestrel exposure, yet our patient received double the usual dose as per dispensing guidance at the time. We review the pharmacokinetics of ritonavir-levonorgestrel DDIs and highlight the need for consistent guidelines on this topic.
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