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Xavier Castells a Fundació Institut Català
de Farmacologia, Servei de Farmacologia Clínica, Hospital
Universitari Vall d'Hebron, 08035-Barcelona, Spain, b Àrea Bàsica de Salut Pla
d'Urgell, Mollerusa, Lleida, Spain Correspondence to: J-R Laporte jrl{at}icf.uab.es
Eprosartan is an angiotensin II receptor antagonist.
Dysgeusia and burning mouth syndrome attributed to angiotensin
converting enzyme inhibitors have been reported.1 Several
case reports related to angiotensin II receptor antagonists have also
been published. We report the case of a patient in whom oral eprosartan induced reversible taste disturbance and burning mouth sensation on two
occasions. This case was reported to the Catalan pharmacovigilance centre.
A 48 year old woman with a 10 year history of essential hypertension
was being treated with valsartan 160 mg daily. She had no other medical
condition and was not taking any other drugs. She started taking
eprosartan 600 mg daily because her blood pressure remained
uncontrolled with valsartan. Three weeks later she complained of a
metallic taste and a burning sensation in her mouth. The oral cavity
was normal and no underlying medical causes were identified. She
stopped taking eprosartan and one week later her taste had returned to
normal. The dysgeusia was not attributed to eprosartan and she started
taking the drug again. A few days later, dysgeusia and the burning
sensation in her mouth returned. She stopped taking eprosartan and her
taste recovered in two days.
Taste disorders related to angiotensin II receptor antagonists had not
been described in clinical trials,2 but several cases of
dysgeusia have been reported in patients treated with losartan3-5 and with valsartan.6 To our
knowledge, this is the first reported case of dysgeusia induced by
eprosartan and the first case of dysgeusia induced by angiotensin II
receptor antagonists with positive rechallenge. Dysgeusia with losartan but not with angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors has been reported
to occur in the same patient, suggesting that angiotensin converting
enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin II receptor antagonists produce this
effect by acting through different mechanisms.5 Because
the incidence of dysgeusia in patients treated with drugs from these
two therapeutic groups is low,
1 2
it is possible that
this adverse effect appears only in patients with some predisposing condition.
In our case report, the temporal sequence of events
and, in
particular, positive rechallenge
and the lack of underlying
concomitant diseases or other drugs strongly suggest that the
association between dysgeusia, burning mouth syndrome, and eprosartan
was causal. Because these effects occurred with eprosartan but not with
valsartan at equivalent doses, however, our observation does not favour
the theory of an effect due to the angiotensin II receptor antagonist
class of drug. Factors predisposing to this adverse effect remain to be
identified and the mechanism remains to be elucidated.
Footnotes
Funding: Departament de Sanitat i Seguretat Social, Generalitat de Catalunya.
Competing interests: None declared.
References
| 1. | Henkin RI. Drug-induced taste and smell disorders. Incidence, mechanisms and management related primarly to treatment of sensory receptor dysfunction. Drug Saf 1994; 11: 318-377[Web of Science][Medline]. |
| 2. | Mazzolai L, Burnier M. Comparative safety and tolerability of angiotensin II-receptor antagonists. Drug Saf 1999; 21: 23-33[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]. |
| 3. | Malnick SD, Becker S. Dysgeusia by losartan in a patient intolerant of captopril. Med Gen Med 1999; 4: E33. |
| 4. | Schlienger RG, Saxer MS, Haefeli WE. Reversible dysgeusia associated with losartan. Lancet 1996; 347: 471-472[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]. |
| 5. |
Heeringa M, van Puijenbroek EP.
Reversible dysgeusia attributed to losartan.
Ann Intern Med
1998;
129:
72 |
| 6. | Stroeder D, Zessig I, Heath R. Angiotensin-II antagonist cGP 48933 (Valsartan). Ergebnisse einer doppelblinden, plazebo-kontrolierten Multicenter-studie. Nieren Hochdruckkrankheiten 1994; 23: 217-220. |