Voll Marsha L, Yap Kim D, Terpstra Wim E, Crul Mirjam
Hospital pharmacy, Medical Center Alkmaar, Wilhelminalaan 12, 1815, JD Alkmaar, The Netherlands.
Pharm World Sci. 2010 Oct;32(5):575-80. doi: 10.1007/s11096-010-9410-0. Epub 2010 Jul 20.
To identify the prevalence of potential drug-drug interactions between hospital pharmacy dispensed anti-cancer agents and community pharmacy dispensed drugs.
A retrospective cohort study was conducted on the haematology/oncology department of the internal medicine ward in a large teaching hospital in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Prescription data from the last 100 patients treated with anti-cancer agents were obtained from Paracelsus, the chemotherapy prescribing system in the hospital. The community pharmacy dispensed drugs of these patients were obtained by using OZIS, a system that allows regionally linked pharmacies to call up active medication on any patient. Both medication lists were manually screened for potential drug-drug interactions by using several information sources on interactions, e.g. Pubmed, the Flockhart P450 table, Micromedex and Dutch reference books.
Prevalence of potential drug-drug interactions between anti-cancer agents provided by the hospital pharmacy and drugs dispensed by the community pharmacy.
Ninety-one patients were included in the study. A total of 31 potential drug-drug interactions were found in 16 patients, of which 15 interactions were clinically relevant and would have required an intervention. Of these interactions 1 had a level of severity ≥ D, meaning the potential drug-drug interaction could lead to long lasting or permanent damage, or even death. The majority of the interactions requiring an intervention (67%) had a considerable level of evidence (≥ 2) and were based on well-documented case reports or controlled interaction studies. Most of the potential drug-drug interactions involved the antiretroviral drugs (40%), proton pump inhibitors (20%) and antibiotics (20%). The anti-cancer drug most involved in the drug-drug interactions is methotrexate (33%).
This study reveals a high prevalence of potential drug-drug interactions between anti-cancer agents provided by the hospital pharmacy and drugs dispensed by the community pharmacy. It shows us there is need for an optimal medication surveillance mechanism to detect potential drug-drug interactions between these two groups of medication, especially because of the high toxicity of anticancer drugs and thus the severe consequences these interactions can have for the patient.
确定医院药房配发的抗癌药物与社区药房配发的药物之间潜在药物相互作用的发生率。
在荷兰阿姆斯特丹一家大型教学医院的内科血液学/肿瘤学病房进行了一项回顾性队列研究。
从医院化疗处方系统Paracelsus获取最近100例接受抗癌药物治疗患者的处方数据。通过使用OZIS获取这些患者在社区药房配发的药物,OZIS是一个允许区域联网药房调用任何患者的现行用药信息的系统。使用多种相互作用信息来源(如PubMed、Flockhart P450表、Micromedex和荷兰参考书)对两份用药清单进行人工筛查,以查找潜在的药物相互作用。
医院药房提供的抗癌药物与社区药房配发的药物之间潜在药物相互作用的发生率。
91例患者纳入研究。在16例患者中总共发现31种潜在药物相互作用,其中15种相互作用具有临床相关性,需要进行干预。在这些相互作用中,有1种严重程度≥D级,这意味着潜在的药物相互作用可能导致长期或永久性损害,甚至死亡。大多数需要干预的相互作用(67%)有相当程度的证据(≥2),并且基于充分记录的病例报告或对照相互作用研究。大多数潜在药物相互作用涉及抗逆转录病毒药物(40%)、质子泵抑制剂(20%)和抗生素(20%)。参与药物相互作用最多的抗癌药物是甲氨蝶呤(33%)。
本研究表明医院药房提供的抗癌药物与社区药房配发的药物之间潜在药物相互作用的发生率很高。这向我们表明需要一种最佳用药监测机制来检测这两组药物之间潜在的药物相互作用,特别是考虑到抗癌药物的高毒性以及这些相互作用可能给患者带来的严重后果。