6533b861fe1ef96bd12c50d7
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Assessing drug-drug interactions through therapeutic drug monitoring when administering oral second-generation antipsychotics.
Christoph HiemkeJose De LeonEdoardo Spinasubject
DrugDrug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactionsmedia_common.quotation_subjecttherapeutic drug monitoringAdministration OralPharmacologyToxicology030226 pharmacology & pharmacyDrug interactions03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePharmacokineticsinhibitorsMedicineHumansProspective cohort studyClozapinemedia_commonLurasidoneinducersPharmacologyRisperidonemedicine.diagnostic_testDose-Response Relationship Drugbusiness.industrysecond-generation antipsychoticsGeneral MedicineDrug interactions; inducers; inhibitors; pharmacokinetics; second-generation antipsychotics; therapeutic drug monitoring030227 psychiatryTherapeutic drug monitoringQuetiapineAntidepressive Agents Second-GenerationDrug Monitoringbusinesspharmacokineticsmedicine.drugAntipsychotic Agentsdescription
Second-generation antipsychotics (SGAs) are frequently co-prescribed with drug metabolic inducers and inhibitors. SGA pharmacokinetic drug-drug interactions (DDIs) with inducers and inhibitors have not received enough attention in the literature but can be studied in by using therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM).The limited information available on oral SGA pharmacokinetic DDIs is reviewed. A systematic literature search on the available oral SGA TDM studies is completed. By integrating TDM studies with the information on in vitro metabolism studies, case report/series and prospective studies, a table is provided to manage average SGA patients taking inducers or inhibitors by using TDM and/or dose SGA changes. Adding an inhibitor or discontinuing an inducer may increase plasma concentrations and cause adverse drug reactions (ADRs) on clozapine or risperidone. Quetiapine and lurasidone, which are very sensitive to decreases of plasma concentrations by induction, should not be administered with potent inducers. Prescribing sertindole with TDM may make its use safer.Reading our article may encourage: 1) clinicians using these combinations to publish TDM case reports/series to demonstrate whether our dose indications are correct or not, in their patients with DDIs; and 2) pharmacokinetic researchers to study these DDIs in prospective and retrospective ways using large TDM databases.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-02-29 |