School of Pharmacy and Graduate Institute, College of Pharmacy, China Medical University, Taichung, Taiwan.
PLoS One. 2013 May 9;8(5):e64255. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0064255. Print 2013.
The risks attributed to drug-herb interactions, even when known, are often ignored or underestimated, especially for those involving anti-clotting drugs and Chinese medicines. The aim of this study was to structurally search and evaluate the existing evidence-based data associated with potential drug interactions between anticoagulant/antiplatelet drugs and Chinese herbal medicines (CHMs) and evaluate the documented mechanisms, consequences, and/or severity of interactions.
Information related to anticoagulant/antiplatelet drug-CHM interactions was retrieved from eight interaction-based textbooks, four web resources and available primary biomedical literature. The primary literature searches were conducted in English and/or Chinese from January 2000 through December 2011 using the secondary databases (e.g., PubMed, Airiti Library, China Journal full-text database). The search terms included the corresponding medical subject headings and key words. Herbs or natural products not used as a single entity CHM or in Chinese Medicinal Prescriptions were excluded from further review. The corresponding mechanisms and severity ratings of interactions were retrieved using MicroMedex®, Lexicomp® and Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database®. Finally, we found 90 single entity CHMs contributed to 306 documented drug-CHM interactions. A total of 194 (63.4%) interactions were verified for its evidence describing possible mechanisms and severity. Of them, 155 interactions (79.9%) were attributable to pharmacodynamic interactions, and almost all were rated as moderate to severe interactions. The major consequences of these interactions were increased bleeding risks due to the additive anticoagulant or antiplatelet effects of the CHMs, specifically danshen, dong quai, ginger, ginkgo, licorice, and turmeric.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Conventional anticoagulants and antiplatelet drugs were documented to have harmful interactions with some commonly used single entity CHMs. For those patients who are taking conventional anti-clotting medications with CHMs for cardiovascular or cerebrovascular diseases, the potential risks of increased bleeding due to drug-CHM interactions should not be ignored.
即使已知药物-草药相互作用的风险,也经常被忽视或低估,尤其是涉及抗凝血药物和中药的风险。本研究旨在对现有的基于证据的抗凝/抗血小板药物与中药(CHM)相互作用相关数据进行结构搜索和评估,并评估相互作用的记录机制、后果和/或严重程度。
从八本基于相互作用的教科书、四个网络资源和现有的主要生物医学文献中检索到与抗凝/抗血小板药物-CHM 相互作用相关的信息。英文和/或中文的初级文献检索分别于 2000 年 1 月至 2011 年 12 月通过二次数据库(如 PubMed、Airiti Library、中国期刊全文数据库)进行。检索词包括相应的医学主题词和关键词。未作为单一实体 CHM 或中药方剂使用的草药或天然产品被排除在进一步审查之外。使用 MicroMedex®、Lexicomp®和 Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database®检索相互作用的相应机制和严重程度评分。最后,我们发现 90 种单一实体 CHM 导致 306 种已记录的药物-CHM 相互作用。总共发现 194 种(63.4%)相互作用有证据描述可能的机制和严重程度。其中,155 种相互作用(79.9%)归因于药效学相互作用,几乎所有相互作用都被评为中度至重度相互作用。这些相互作用的主要后果是由于 CHM 的抗凝或抗血小板作用相加而增加出血风险,特别是丹参、当归、生姜、银杏、甘草和姜黄。
结论/意义:已记录常用单一实体 CHM 与传统抗凝剂和抗血小板药物有不良相互作用。对于那些正在服用传统抗凝血药物和 CHM 治疗心血管或脑血管疾病的患者,不应忽视药物-CHM 相互作用导致出血风险增加的潜在风险。