Adverse drug reactions & Interactions Flashcards
Stats on ADRs
- 5% of hospital admissions are ADR-related
- 10-20% of hospital patients suffer ADR
- 0.1% of medical patient mortality
- Many patients receiving polypharmacy, increases chances of interactions/ADRs
BNF definitions of incidence
Very common: 1 in 10
Common: up to 1 in 100
Less commonly: up to 1 in 1000
Rare: up to 1 in 10,000
Very rare: Less than 1 in 10,000
Determinantsof drug toxicity
- Genetic
- Chemical
- Metabolic
- Drug interactions
- Altered microbial flora
- Hypersensitivity
Describe ADR type A
- The normal pharmacological response is undesirable
- Dose-related
- Predictable
- Usually managed by dose adjustment
Describe AB associated C. diff diarrhoea
- Antibiotic treatment = kills off other gut bacteria + allows C. difficile to proliferate
- Produces an enterotoxin (toxin A) and a cytotoxin (toxin B) which cause clinical disease
- Effects can range from mild diarrhoea to life-threatening pseudomembranous colitis
Explain c.diff cycle
ABs associated with CD diarrhoea
Common
Ampicillin
Amoxicillin
Co-amoxiclav
Cephalosporins
Clindamycin
Macrolides
Quinolones
Define Type B ADR
Type B reactions are idiosyncratic, bizarre or novel responses that cannot be predicted from the known pharmacology of a drug and are associated with low morbidity and high mortality
Often related to genetics or immunology
TYPE I-IV Hypersensitivity reactions
Epidemiology of Penicillin allergy
- 1-10%
- 6-fold risk increase if previous reaction
- Risk greater for parenteral admin
- Significant proportion who develop anaphylaxis have no previous history of drug reaction
B-lactam vs penicillin allergy considerations
- GI upset is common = Rx should continue
- Rash = no more penicillins; other B-lactams probably ok (risk of cross-over allergy low)
- Angioedema/anaphylaxis = no more B-lactams; use other class of agent
Types of skin reactions
Urticaria
Erythematous eruptions: reddening, may resemble measles or maculopapular
Toxic epidermal necrolysis: rare but often fatal with blistering and skin peels off
- Sulphonamides
- Beta-lactams
Stevens-Johnson syndrome: fever, rash, blisters
- Vancomycin
- Penicillins
- Sulphonamides
Possible consequences of drug interactions
May increase toxicity
Or
Reduce activity – failure of therapy
Possible interaction mechanisms caused by CYP
Inhibition
Induction (CYP2D6 not inducible)
Examples of CYP induced metabolism
Enzyme induction: increase activity of metabolising enzymes
- Rifampicin
- Griseofulvin
Reduce plasma conc of range of drugs E.g. rifampicin increase metabolism of OCs
May take a week or 2 for effect
Effect may persist on stopping inducer