Cognitive impairment during therapeutic total VPA concentration 6 139 6.1 Introduction Valproic acid (VPA) is highly protein bound in blood (80-95%), mainly to albumin (Greenblatt, Sellers and Koch-Weser, 1982; Dasgupta, 2007). Binding of VPA to albumin is non-linear, concentration-dependent and saturable. The unbound VPA concentration can therefore rise substantially with a dosage increase, or if the number of binding sites for VPA decreases (Greenblatt, Sellers and Koch-Weser, 1982; Dasgupta, 2007). In hypoalbuminemic patients, VPA binding may decrease, in which case a patient can experience toxic effects although the total concentration is within the therapeutic range, since it is the free concentration that is pharmacologically active and correlates best with brain concentrations (1). It is then clinically relevant to measure the free concentration of VPA (Greenblatt, Sellers and KochWeser, 1982; De Maat, Van Leeuwen and Edelbroek, 2011; Jansen et al., 2012). In clinical practice, total VPA serum concentrations (tVPAc) are generally measured instead of free concentrations due to analytical difficulties, a lack of an established reference range and guidelines not requiring the measurement of free concentration (Greenblatt, Sellers and Koch-Weser, 1982; Dasgupta, 2007; Dols et al., 2016). 6.2 Case presentation We present a 66-year old woman with bipolar disorder since 2001 who developed severe reversible cognitive impairment associated with a high free concentration of VPA probably due to hypoalbuminemia. She had no comorbidities, was living independently, had no history of alcohol abuse and recently stopped smoking. She had been stable on citalopram and lithium therapy for fifteen years managed by her general practitioner without cognitive complaints. Due to a lithium encephalopathy (3.1 mmol/L), she was admitted to the internal medicines department which led to the decision to stop lithium and subsequently citalopram. Secondly, a nephrotic syndrome was diagnosed and a renal biopsy showed Anti-Phospholipase A2 Receptor (anti-PLA2R) membranous nephropathy which may have caused the lithium intoxication and proteinuria (14g/10 mmol creatinine) with hypoalbuminemia. Prednisone and cyclophosphamide were prescribed to treat the proteinuria. A month after discharge she became hypomanic. VPA 300mg/day was initiated (day 1) as she refused lithium reintroduction and was referred to a psychiatric outpatient clinic. No cognitive impairment was present at referral (day 13), with a Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) score of 24/30 during hypomania (Nasreddine et al., 2005). After VPA initiation, blood test results (day 18) (supplemental file) were unremarkable besides a tVPAc of 21 mg/l (40 - 120), erythrocyte sedimentation rate of 108 mm/h (1 - 12), glomerular filtration rate of (GFR) 53 ml/min/1.73m2 (>90), and albumin of 23g/l (35 – 55). The tVPAc was determined with an immuno-assay technique (Siemens, Dimension EXL200). VPA was
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