“…Drug interactions associated with clopidogrel could be frequently encountered in patient care (Kim et al, 2016;Xie et al, 2011). Recent studies documented that phase II metabolitesglucuronidescould be the ligands of human CYP2C8 (Ma, Fu, Khojasteh, Dalvie, & Zhang, 2017), and that CAG is known to be a potent, time-dependent inhibitor of CYP2C8 (Backman, Filppula, Niemi, & Neuvonen, 2016;Bergmann et al, 2016;Itkonen et al, 2016;Kim et al, 2016;Tornio et al, 2014). High plasma CAG concentrations would strongly inhibit the metabolism of the substrate drugs of CYP2C8, such as cerivastatin (Floyd et al, 2012), dasabuvir (Arya, Zhao, Reynolds, Mishra, & Younis, 2017;Shebley, Fu, Badri, Bow, & Fischer, 2017), desloratadine (Kazmi, Barbara, Yerino, & Parkinson, 2015), paclitaxel (Agergaard et al, 2017;Backman et al, 2016;Bergmann et al, 2016), pioglitazone (Itkonen et al, 2016;Kim et al, 2016), repaglinide (Tornio et al, 2014;Kim et al, 2016), and more, which would result in serious adverse drug reactions, such as cerivastatin-induced rhabdomyolysis (Floyd et al, 2012), pioglitazone-associated fluid retention (Itkonen et al, 2016), paclitaxel-related neurotoxicity (Bergmann et al, 2016), and repaglinide-mediated hypoglycemia (Tornio et al, 2014).…”