ARTERITIS AND INCREASED INTRACELLULAR CALCIUM AS A POSSIBLE MECHANISM FOR TACROLIMUS-RELATED CARDIAC TOXICITY IN A PEDIATRIC TRANSPLANT RECIPIENT

Abstract
We recently reported partially to wholly reversible hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, including severe hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy, as a side effect in pediatric transplant recipients receiving tacrolimus immunosuppression. This seemed to be dose related. We describe a pediatric patient receiving tacrolimus who died 3 weeks after liver/bowel transplantation. Postmortem findings revealed arteritis of cardiac arteries and extensive calcification of cardiac tissue suggesting a possible mechanism of tacrolimus cardiac toxicity. This is consistent with recent reports of tacrolimus increasing calcium release into the sarcoplasmic reticulum of cardiac and striated muscle.