Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Department of Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Department of Pharmacology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool.
AIDS. 2021 Dec 15;35(Suppl 2):S145-S151. doi: 10.1097/QAD.0000000000002950.
Drug--drug interactions (DDIs) have been a clinical challenge in HIV medicine for over two decades. The newer antiretroviral drugs (ARTs) have significantly fewer DDIs than protease inhibitors and boosted integrase inhibitors (INSTIs). The lower propensity of such newer antiretrovirals (e.g. unboosted integrase inhibitors; doravirine) to cause DDIs, has been largely offset by the ageing cohort of patients with multiple comorbidities, who are taking multiple chronic medicines. Furthermore, the introduction of newly marketed drugs into clinical practice needs to be closely monitored, as the new drugs may be perpetrators of DDIs, leading to a potential change in the efficacy or toxicity of the coadministered antiretrovirals.
药物-药物相互作用(DDIs)在 HIV 医学领域已经成为一个临床挑战超过二十年。新型抗逆转录病毒药物(ARTs)与蛋白酶抑制剂和整合酶抑制剂(INSTIs)相比,DDI 显著减少。由于患有多种合并症的老年患者服用多种慢性药物,此类新型抗逆转录病毒药物(例如未增强的整合酶抑制剂;多拉韦林)引起 DDI 的倾向较低。此外,新上市药物在临床实践中的引入需要密切监测,因为新药可能是 DDI 的肇事者,导致共同给予的抗逆转录病毒药物的疗效或毒性发生潜在变化。