Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Sodium aurothiomalate

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Trade names
  
Myocrisin

ATC code
  
M01CB01 (WHO)

Routes of administration
  
Intramuscular

Sodium aurothiomalate

AHFS/Drugs.com
  
Multum Consumer Information

License data
  
US FDA: Gold_sodium_thiomalate

Pregnancy category
  
AU: B2 US: C (Risk not ruled out)

Sodium aurothiomalate (INN, known in the United States as gold sodium thiomalate) is a gold compound that is used for its immunosuppressive anti-rheumatic effects. Along with an orally-administered gold salt, auranofin, it is one of only two gold compounds currently employed in modern medicine.

Contents

Medical uses

It is primarily given once or twice weekly by intramuscular injection for moderate-severe rheumatoid arthritis although it has also proven itself effective in treating tuberculosis.

Adverse effects

Its most common side effects are digestive (mostly dyspepsia, mouth swelling, nausea, vomiting and taste disturbance), vasomotor (mostly flushing, fainting, dizziness, sweating, weakness, palpitations, shortness of breath and blurred vision) or dermatologic (usually itchiness, rash, local irritation near to the injection site and hair loss) in nature, although conjunctivitis, blood dyscrasias, kidney damage, joint pain, muscle aches/pains and liver dysfunction are also common. Less commonly, it can cause GI bleeds, dry mucous membranes and gingivitis. Rarely it can cause: aplastic anaemia, ulcerative enterocolitis, difficulty swallowing, angiooedema, pneumonitis, pulmonary fibrosis, hepatotoxicity, cholestatic jaundice, peripheral neuropathy, Guillain–Barré syndrome, encephalopathy, encephalitis and photosensitivity.

Pharmacology

Its precise mechanism of action is unknown but is known that it inhibits the synthesis of prostaglandins. It also modulates phagocytic cells and inhibits class II major histocompatibility complex-peptide interactions. It is also known that it inhibits the following enzymes:

  • Acid phosphatase
  • Beta-glucuronidase
  • Elastase
  • Cathepsin G
  • Thrombin
  • History of use

    Reports of favorable use of the compound were published in France in 1929 by Jacques Forestier. The use of gold salts was then a controversial treatment and was not immediately accepted by the international community. Success was found in the treatment of Raoul Dufy's joint pain by the use of gold salts in 1940; "(The treatment) brought in a few weeks such a spectacular sense of healing, that Dufy ... boasted of again having the ability to catch a tram on the move."

  • The compound was used as a poison by a patient's wife in an episode of House ("Clueless", season 2 episode 15).
  • References

    Sodium aurothiomalate Wikipedia