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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, August 2000, p. 2143-2148, Vol. 44, No. 8
Departments of
Medicine1 and
Pathology,2 University of Oklahoma
Health Sciences Center and Department of Veterans Affairs Medical
Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73190, and Astra USA, Inc.,
Westborough, Massachusetts 01581-45003
Received 8 February 2000/Returned for modification 13 April
2000/Accepted 2 May 2000
Foscarnet (trisodium phosphonoformate hexahydrate) is an antiviral
agent used to treat cytomegalovirus disease in immunocompromised patients. One common side effect is acute ionized hypocalcemia and
hypomagnesemia following intravenous administration. Foscarnet-induced ionized hypomagnesemia might contribute to ionized hypocalcemia by
impairing excretion of preformed parathyroid hormone (PTH) or by
producing target organ resistance. Prevention of ionized hypomagnesemia
following foscarnet administration could blunt the development of
ionized hypocalcemia. To determine whether intravenous magnesium
ameliorates the decline in ionized calcium and/or magnesium following
foscarnet infusions, MgSO4 at doses of 1, 2, and 3 g
was administered in a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized,
crossover trial to 12 patients with AIDS and cytomegalovirus disease.
Overall, increasing doses of MgSO4 reduced or eliminated foscarnet-induced acute ionized hypomagnesemia. Supplementation, however, had no discernible effect on foscarnet-induced ionized hypocalcemia despite significant increases in serum PTH levels. No
dose-related, clinically significant adverse events were found, suggesting that intravenous supplementation with up to 3 g of MgSO4 was safe in this chronically ill population. Since
parenteral MgSO4 did not alter foscarnet-induced ionized
hypocalcemia or symptoms associated with foscarnet, routine intravenous
supplementation for patients with normal serum magnesium levels is not
recommended during treatment with foscarnet.
0066-4804/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
A Double-Blind Placebo-Controlled Crossover Trial of Intravenous
Magnesium Sulfate for Foscarnet-Induced Ionized Hypocalcemia and
Hypomagnesemia in Patients with AIDS and Cytomegalovirus
Infection


and
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Infectious
Diseases (111C), 921 N.E. 13th St., Oklahoma City, OK 73104. Phone: (405) 270-0501, ext. 3285. Fax: (405) 297-5934. E-mail:
mark-huycke{at}ouhsc.edu.
Present address: 330 South 5th St., Suite 405, Enid, OK 73701.
Present address: 301 West Poplar, Suite 100, Walla Walla, WA 99362.
§
Present address: Rho, Inc., Newton, MA 02459.
Present address: Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
Cambridge, MA 02139.
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