Module 11 - Drug Interactions Flashcards
most common type of drug interaction
those affecting pharmacokinetics (ADME)
when 2 or more drugs interact what are the 3 possible outcomes
- increased effect
- decreased effect
- generation of new effect
increased effects
can increase drug effects by either an increase in the therapeutic effect or an increased adverse effect
increased therapeutic effects
Ampicillin is an antibiotic that is rapidly inactivated by bacterial enzymes, poor therapeutic response
Sulbactam is an inhibitor of the bacterial enzyme that inactivates ampicillin.
Ampicillin + sulbactam = increased therapeutic response of ampicillin
increased adverse effects
- Warfarin is an anticoagulant used to thin the blood.
- Aspirin is an analgesic that also thins the blood.
warfarin = effective blood thinner
warfarin + aspirin = bleeding
decreased effects
Drug interactions can reduce drug effects by either reducing therapeutic effects or reduced adverse effects.
Reduced therapeutic effects
- Clopidogrel is an anticoagulant. It is a pro-drug that requires metabolic activation by CYP2C19.
- Omeprazole (a drug used to treat stomach ulcers) inhibits CYP2C19.
- When given together, the active metabolite of clopidogrel is not formed, therefore insufficient anticoagulation occurs.
Reduced adverse effect
- Morphine is an analgesic used to treat pain.
- Morphine overdose can produce coma, respiratory depression and even death.
- To treat morphine overdose the competitive antagonist naloxone can be administered.
Generation of new effect
- Disulfiram is a drug used to help treat chronic alcoholism.
- Alcohol is normally metabolized to acetaldehyde and then further to acetic acid.
- It is the acetaldehyde that makes you feel hungover (headache, nausea, vomiting, visual disturbance etc.).
- Disulfiram inhibits the metabolism of acetaldehyde. Use of this drug causes acetaldehyde levels to increase and patients have very severe hangover like symptoms. This occurs within as little as 10 minutes after alcohol intake
Disulfiram
is a drug used to help treat chronic alcoholism.
Types of drug interactions
- direct physical interaction
- pharmacokinetic interaction
- pharmacodynamic interaction
- combined toxicity
direct physical interaction
- The most common direct interaction occurs when two or more IV solutions are mixed together.
- Often mixing IV solutions together can cause a precipitate to form.
- If a precipitate is formed the mixture should be discarded and NOT administered
- The benzodiazepine drug diazepam is particularly problematic and should never be mixed with another drug.
- drug interactions can occur following administration
- ex: if a patient is given sodium bicarbonate followed by calcium gluconate, a precipitate may form in the blood.
Pharmacokinetic Interaction
- Pharmacokinetic drug interactions are by far the most common type of drug interaction experienced in patients.
- In these types of interactions, taking two or more drugs may change the absorption, distribution, metabolism and/or excretion of one or more drugs.
Absorption altered pH
- Drugs that effect gastric or intestinal pH can alter drug absorption.
- The most common drug interaction with respect to alteration of pH occurs with antacids.
- Antacids increase gastric pH and therefore increase the absorption of drugs that are weak bases and decrease the absorption of drugs that are weak acids.
- Antacids can also dramatically affect the absorption of enteric coated drugs.
- Enteric coated drugs are designed to pass through the acidic stomach without dissolution. Once they reach the more alkaline intestine dissolution begins.
- When an antacid is taken, it increases the pH of the stomach and therefore promotes premature dissolution of enteric coated drugs.
Absorption chelation/binding
- binding causes the formation of insoluble complexes that can’t be absorbed.
- The best example of this type of interaction occurs with drugs known as bile acid sequestrants
- Bile acid sequestrants are designed to bind intestinal bile acids and prevent their absorption from the intestine. The cholestyramine-bile acid complex is excreted in the feces
- bile acid sequestrant cholestyramine binds to digoxin in the intestine and decreases its absorption. Only the free digoxin is absorbed into the blood.
Absorption Blood Flow
- blood flow increases absorption
- Drugs that decrease blood flow decrease the absorption of drugs.
- One example is the use of epinephrine with a local anesthetic.
- If a local anesthetic is administered alone, it may diffuse into the blood away from the injection site.
- If epinephrine is injected with a local anesthetic, it causes vasoconstriction and decreases the absorption of the local anesthetic. This allows the local anesthetic to stay at the injection site where it is required to prevent pain sensation.
Absorption Gut Motility
- Some drugs affect intestinal motility.
- Drugs can either cause an increase or a decrease in intestinal motility.
- Laxatives used to treat constipation cause increased gut motility.
- Increased gut motility results in decreased drug absorption.
- Opiate drugs used to treat pain, such as morphine, decrease gut motility and therefore increase drug absorption.
Absorption Vomiting
- Drugs that induce vomiting will decrease the absorption of other drugs.
- If vomiting occurs within 20 – 30 minutes after taking one or more medications, it is likely that absorption is incomplete.
- If the drug(s) entered the intestine before the patient vomited, giving another dose may produce toxicity.
Drugs that kill intestinal bacteria
- Their primary metabolic activity is deconjugating phase II drug metabolites as part of enterohepatic recycling.
- Antibiotic drugs that kill intestinal bacteria can cause decreased deconjugation and therefore decreased absorption during enterohepatic recycling.
- The end result is decreased plasma drug concentration
Distribution altering pH
- A drug that can change extracellular pH can influence the ionization of other drugs.
- Ionization is a major determinant of drug distribution.
- The drug sodium bicarbonate increases the extracellular pH whereas ammonium chloride decreases extracellular pH.
- Due to pH partitioning, changing the extracellular pH can draw a drug from inside the cell to outside by changing its ionization.
- For example, during an overdose of aspirin, increasing the extracellular pH with sodium bicarbonate will draw aspirin (a weak acid) outside the cell and cause it to become ionized. Once “trapped” in the extracellular fluid aspirin may be eliminated in the urine.
Distribution protein binding
- If two drugs are bound to the same site on plasma proteins, co-administration will result in competition for binding.
- The drug with the lower affinity for the protein will become free.
- This may result in increased therapeutic effect, increased toxicity and/or increased excretion.
distribution metabolism
- Altered drug metabolism is one of the most important and common types of drug interaction.
- Some drugs increase the metabolism of other drugs by inducing drug metabolizing enzymes (CYPs).
- Other drugs inhibit the metabolism of drugs by inhibiting CYPs.
- Most of these types of drug interaction occur in the liver and/or intestine.
CYP induction
- Some drugs increase the synthesis of CYP enzymes, a process known as induction.
- The result of induction is increased drug metabolism.
- Induction is delayed; therefore it may take 2-10 days following exposure to the enzyme inducer before the induction occurs.
- Once the inducer is stopped it takes 7 – 10 days before the CYP enzyme levels return to normal.
Examples of CYP inducers
Cigarette/marijuana smoke (one joint has the same effect on induction as 5-10 cigarettes).
- Rifampin – induces CYP3A4
- Phenobarbital – induces many CYPs.
- BBQ’d food – Induces CYP1A2
- Alcohol – Induces CYP2E1 (but severe alcoholism causing cirrhosis decreases CYP activity).