Interakcje międzylekowe (DDIs) stanowią poważne zagrożenie dla zdrowia w codziennej praktyce klinicznej na oddziale intensywnej terapii (ICU). DDI dzielą się na farmakokinetyczne i farmakodynamiczne. Celem pracy była ocena częstości występowania i możliwych skutków interakcji farmakodynamicznych na ICU na przestrzeni 12 miesięcy.
Many studies have suggested a link between long-term PPI treatment and hypomagnesaemia, though none of them investigated the short-term exposure in high-risk patients. We sought to investigate this issue in 90 critically ill patients. We assessed serum Mg concentrations, necessity of Mg supplementation, PPI dose, duration of PPI therapy and route of administration. In multiple analysis we found that Mg supplementation (positive effect/p=0.03) and enteral route of PPI administration (negative effect/p=0.02) had significant impact on Mg concentration. Although the deleterious relationship between short-term PPI treatment and Mg concentration was found, further studies should be provided to confirm this interesting effect.
Background: Drug-drug interactions constitute a serious health hazard in everyday clinical practice in critically ill patients. Drug-drug interactions may be pharmacokinetic or pharmacodynamic in their nature. We aimed to investigate the quantity and quality of possible drug-drug interactions, and their possible side effects in intensive care unit patients in a 12-month period. Methods: This retrospective study covered data on pharmacological treatment of 43 consecutive patients (11 females, 32 males) aged 62 ± 15 years, hospitalized between January 2015 and February 2016. Pharmacokinetic DDIs were identified and graded. Only severe and clinically important drug-drug interactions were subjected for further analysis. Results: Median baseline SAPS III was 53 (IQR 38-67) points. Median intensive care unit stay was 12 (6-25) days. Subjects were treated with a median number of 22 (12-27) drugs. We identified 27 (16-41) possible drug-drug interactions per patient, including 3 (1-7) drug-drug interactions of a severe grade. The total number of severe and clinically important drug-drug interactions was 253 of which 227 were analyzed in detail. No possible side-effects of drug-drug interactions were identified. Conclusions: DDIs as well as their side-effects are challenging regarding their precise evaluation, especially due to the need for multidrug treatment in critically ill patients. Concentration-controlled therapy should be recommended, especially for treatment with vancomycin, digoxin and valproate. Pantoprazole should be a proton pump-inhibitor of choice. Drug dose modification is necessary in combined treatment with fluconazole and amiodarone or rifampicin. From a clinical point of view, the most important impact of drug-drug interactions is on antibiotic treatment effectiveness, especially with meropenem when valproate is also prescribed.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.