Ambrosioni Juan, Díaz Natalia Anahí, Marzolini Catia, Dragovic Gordana, Imaz Arkaitz, Calcagno Andrea, Luque Sonia, Curran Adrian, Troya Jesus, Tuset Montse, Khoo Saye, Burger David, Cortés Claudia P, Naous Nadia, Molto Jose
HIV Unit, Infectious Diseases Service, Hospital Clinic- Fundacio de recerca Clinic Barcelona-Institut de investigacions Biomediques August Pi i Sunyer, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades Infecciosas (CIBERINFEC), Madrid, Spain.
Infect Dis Ther. 2024 Mar;13(3):609-617. doi: 10.1007/s40121-024-00935-0. Epub 2024 Feb 19.
The objective was to characterize real-world outcomes of drug-drug interactions (DDIs) between antiretrovirals (ARVs) and other drugs, including over-the-counter medications (OTC), and treatment outcomes in clinical practice.
www.clinicalcasesDDIs.com is an open-access website for healthcare providers to consult and briefly describe real-world clinical cases on DDI with ARVs. We reviewed all the clinical cases reported to the website between March 2019 and May 2023.
A total of 139 cases were reported, mostly involving ritonavir or cobicistat (boosters; 74 cases), unboosted integrase inhibitors (InSTI; 29 cases), and non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTI; 23 cases). Central nervous system drugs (29 cases) and cardiovascular drugs (19 cases) were the most frequently described co-medications. Notably, OTC medications were implicated in 27 cases, including mineral supplements (11 cases), herbals (8 cases), weight loss drugs (4 cases), anabolic steroids (3 cases), and recreational drugs (1 case). OTC acted as the perpetrator drug in 21 cases, leading to loss of ARV efficacy in 17 instances (mineral supplements in 10 cases, weight loss drugs in 4 cases, herbals in 3 cases). Additionally, toxicity was reported in 4 out of 6 cases where OTC was considered the victim drug of the DDI (anabolic steroids in 3 cases, MDMA in 1 case).
Frequent unwanted outcomes resulting from DDIs between ARVs and OTC medications underscore the importance of integrating non-prescription drugs into medication reconciliation. The real-world data available through www.clinicalcasesDDIs.com serves as a valuable resource for assessing the clinical relevance of DDIs.
目的是描述抗逆转录病毒药物(ARV)与其他药物(包括非处方药[OTC])之间药物相互作用(DDI)的真实世界结果,以及临床实践中的治疗结果。
共报告了139例病例,大多涉及利托那韦或考比司他(增效剂;74例)、未增效的整合酶抑制剂(InSTI;29例)和非核苷类逆转录酶抑制剂(NNRTI;23例)。中枢神经系统药物(29例)和心血管药物(19例)是最常描述的合并用药。值得注意的是,OTC药物涉及27例,包括矿物质补充剂(11例)、草药(8例)、减肥药(4例)、合成代谢类固醇(3例)和消遣性药物(1例)。OTC作为引发药物的有21例,导致ARV疗效丧失的有17例(矿物质补充剂10例、减肥药4例、草药3例)。此外,在6例中,有4例报告了毒性反应,其中OTC被认为是DDI的受害者药物(合成代谢类固醇3例、摇头丸1例)。
ARV与OTC药物之间的DDI频繁产生不良后果,凸显了将非处方药纳入用药核对的重要性。通过www.clinicalcasesDDIs.com获得的真实世界数据是评估DDI临床相关性的宝贵资源。