Endoscopy 2011; 43(1): 70-72
DOI: 10.1055/s-0030-1255931
Case report/series

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Multiple ulcers in the small and large intestines occurred during tocilizumab therapy for rheumatoid arthritis

T.  Iwasa1 , K.  Nakamura1 , H.  Ogino1 , S.  Itaba1 , H.  Akiho1 , R.  Okamoto1 , Y.  Iboshi1 , A.  Aso1 , H.  Murao1 , K.  Kanayama1 , T.  Ito1 , R.  Takayanagi1
  • 1Department of Medicine and Bioregulatory Science, Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Kyushu University, Japan
Weitere Informationen

Publikationsverlauf

submitted 3 August 2010

accepted after revision 15 August 2010

Publikationsdatum:
24. November 2010 (online)

Tocilizumab is a monoclonal antibody against human interleukin-6 receptor which blocks the binding of interleukin-6 to its receptor. Tocilizumab is effective for the treatment of inflammatory disorders including rheumatoid arthritis. We report a case of multiple ulcers in the small and large intestines, which occurred during tocilizumab therapy. A 57-year-old woman started to use tocilizumab for rheumatoid arthritis. Three months later, she complained of hematochezia. Double-balloon endoscopy revealed multiple small aphthoid ulcers in the small and large intestines. One month after the woman had recovered, she was given tocilizumab again. The woman had hematochezia and abdominal pain again 2 weeks later. Colonoscopy revealed multiple round, discrete punched-out ulcers in the terminal ileum, and vast deep ulcers from the cecum to the descending colon. Bioptic histopathology and cultivation showed non-specific findings. Six weeks after discontinuation of tocilizumab, ulcers in the small and large intestine dramatically improved, leaving ulcer scars. This disease course and the results of examination made us strongly suspect that tocilizumab induced multiple ulcers in the small and large intestines. Interleukin-6 is a pleiotropic cytokine and involved in intestinal mucosal wound healing as well as in inflammatory processes. It is possible that tocilizumab inhibited tissue repair of the intestine and caused intestinal ulcers.

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K. NakamuraMD 

Department of Medicine and Bioregulatory Science
Graduate School of Medical Sciences
Kyushu University

3-1-1 Maidashi
Higashi-ku
Fukuoka 812-8582
Japan

Fax: +81-92-642-5287

eMail: knakamur@intmed3.med.kyushu-u.ac.jp