Mouly Stéphane, Lloret-Linares Célia, Sellier Pierre-Olivier, Sene Damien, Bergmann J-F
UMR-S1144, Faculté de Médecine Paris-Diderot, 10 avenue de Verdun 75010 Paris, France; Département de Médecine Interne, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, Hôpital Lariboisière, 2 rue Ambroise Paré ,75010 Paris, France.
UMR-S1144, Faculté de Médecine Paris-Diderot, 10 avenue de Verdun 75010 Paris, France; Département de Médecine Interne, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, Hôpital Lariboisière, 2 rue Ambroise Paré ,75010 Paris, France.
Pharmacol Res. 2017 Apr;118:82-92. doi: 10.1016/j.phrs.2016.09.038. Epub 2016 Sep 28.
An interaction of drug with food, herbs, and dietary supplements is usually the consequence of a physical, chemical or physiologic relationship between a drug and a product consumed as food, nutritional supplement or over-the-counter medicinal plant. The current educational review aims at reminding to the prescribing physicians that the most clinically relevant drug-food interactions may not be strictly limited to those with grapefruit juice and with the Saint John's Wort herbal extract and may be responsible for changes in drug plasma concentrations, which in turn decrease efficacy or led to sometimes life-threatening toxicity. Common situations handled in clinical practice such as aging, concomitant medications, transplant recipients, patients with cancer, malnutrition, HIV infection and those receiving enteral or parenteral feeding may be at increased risk of drug-food or drug-herb interactions. Medications with narrow therapeutic index or potential life-threatening toxicity, e.g., the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, opioid analgesics, cardiovascular medications, warfarin, anticancer drugs and immunosuppressants may be at risk of significant drug-food interactions to occur. Despite the fact that considerable effort has been achieved to increase patient' and doctor's information and ability to anticipate their occurrence and consequences in clinical practice, a thorough and detailed health history and dietary recall are essential for identifying potential problems in order to optimize patient prescriptions and drug dosing on an individual basis as well as to increase the treatment risk/benefit ratio.
药物与食物、草药及膳食补充剂之间的相互作用通常是药物与作为食物、营养补充剂或非处方药用植物摄入的产品之间物理、化学或生理关系的结果。本次教育综述旨在提醒开处方的医生,临床上最相关的药物-食物相互作用可能并不严格局限于与葡萄柚汁和圣约翰草提取物的相互作用,这些相互作用可能导致药物血浆浓度变化,进而降低疗效或有时导致危及生命的毒性。临床实践中常见的情况,如老龄化、同时使用多种药物、移植受者、癌症患者、营养不良、艾滋病毒感染以及接受肠内或肠外营养的患者,发生药物-食物或药物-草药相互作用的风险可能会增加。治疗指数窄或有潜在危及生命毒性的药物,如非甾体抗炎药、阿片类镇痛药、心血管药物、华法林、抗癌药物和免疫抑制剂,可能有发生显著药物-食物相互作用的风险。尽管已经付出了相当大的努力来增加患者和医生对其在临床实践中发生情况及后果的了解和预测能力,但全面而详细的健康史和饮食回顾对于识别潜在问题至关重要,以便在个体基础上优化患者处方和药物剂量,并提高治疗的风险/效益比。