Drug Interactions Flashcards

1
Q

What is an object drug?

A

Drug whose effect or action is altered by introduction of another agent

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2
Q

What is a precipitant drug?

A

Drug which alters or precipitates a change in the effect of the other drug

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3
Q

What common drugs have DDIs?

A

Concentration-dependent toxicity e.g digoxin
Steep dose-response curve e.g. Levodopa
Patient dependent on therapeutic effect: oral contraceptives
Saturable hepatic metabolism e.g. phenytoin

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4
Q

What are some patient factors for DDIs:

A

Polypharmacy
Elderly - pharmacokinetic changes e.g. renal function, Vd, muscle mass
Critically ill/multiple comorbidities - physiological changes may affect drug handling
Chronic illness - diabetes, COPD, asthma

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5
Q

What are mechanisms of DDIs?

A
Pharmaceutical incompatibilities
Pharmacodynamic interactions
Pharmacokinetic interactions (ADME)
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6
Q

What are pharmaceutical incompatibilities?

A

Occurs before drug introduced to the body e.g. benzodiazepines absorbed onto rubber.
Often involves precipitation of additives to intravenous fluids & other formulation.
Exposure time and number of drugs mixed important
Usually picked up at time of reconstitution or checking with pharmacist

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7
Q

What are pharmacodynamic interactions?

A

Interactions related to the drug’s mechanism or site of action. This means that they great majority of such interactions are predictable.
Interactions can be classified as either competitive or additive at the same drug target. or arising from the same effect at different drug targets

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8
Q

How can pharmacodynamic interactions be avoided?

A

With careful prescribing.

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9
Q

What are examples of direct competitive pharmacodynamic interactions?

A

salbutamol & metoprolol

Morphine & naloxone

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10
Q

What are examples of additive effects at same receptor site?

A

Two NSAIDs or two beta-blockers

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11
Q

What are examples of indirect additive effects via different sites of action?

A

SSRIs & MAOIs (serotonin syndrome)

NSAIDs & Warfarin (increased risk of bleeding)

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12
Q

What are some pharmacokinetic interactions during absorption?

A

Changes in pH: omeprazole decrease bioavailability of ketoconazole by altering degree of ionization
Binding and chelation: antacids and iron chelate (physically bind)
Gastrointestinal motility: drugs with anticholinergic effects (tricyclic antidepressants) reduce GI motility & increase bioavailability of levodopa

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13
Q

What are some pharmacokinetic interactions during distribution?

A

Many drugs bind to plasma albumin e.g. warfarin, phenytoin, thyroxin, tricyclics.

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14
Q

What are some pharmacokinetic interactions in metabolism?

A

A large number of drug interactions of clinical significance involve the effect of one drug on the metabolism of another. e.g. CYP450 enzymes

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15
Q

How many subgroups of CYP450 enzymes?

A

Four main subgroups, 60 isoenzymes

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16
Q

What CYP enzymes are mostly involved?

A

CYP1A2, CYP2D6, CYP2C19, CYP3A4

17
Q

How can genes and ethnic groups affect drugs?

A

Genes that encode specific isoenzymes can vary between individuals and ethnic groups
6-10% of Caucasians lack CYP2D6 (codeine)

18
Q

What are enzyme inducers?

A

Enzyme induction means that the actual amount of the enzyme is increased. Involves production of addition enzymes so takes place gradually over several days or weeks

19
Q

What are enzyme inhibitors?

A

Enzyme inhibition means that the amount of the enzyme is reduced or its effect is blocked

20
Q

What occurs is enzymes are blocked?

A

They will reduce the metabolism of the object drug using the same metabolic pathway. The object drug will accumulate and if it has a low therapeutic window then adverse effects may occur

21
Q

What are some examples of enzyme inhibitors?

A

Cimetidine, omeprazole, erythromycin, clarithromycin, allopurinol, verapamil

22
Q

What are some examples of enzyme inducers?

A

St John’s Wort, alcohol, cigarette smoke, rifampicin, phenytoin, carbamazepine

23
Q

How do enzyme inducers work?

A

Enzyme induction increases metabolism of the object drug and decreases its pharmacological effect.
For therapeutically important object drugs which rely on stable plasma concentration there is a risk of therapeutic failure

24
Q

What are pharmacokinetic interactions in excretion?

A

Changes in urinary pH - at alkaline pH weak acids are not reabsorbed and excreted, at acidic pH weak bases are not reabsorbed and excreted

Urine acidification (e.g. citric acid) or alkalisation (e.g. sodium bicarbonate) will change degree of ionisation & lipid solubility of filtered drugs

25
Q

What is an example of drug-food interaction?

A

Grapefruit juice contains flavonoids which inhibit CYP3A4 in intestinal wall - increases bioavailability of statins/felodipine

26
Q

What is an example of drug-alcohol interaction?

A

Additive or synergistic effects with most CNS active drugs: antidepressants, opioids