Risk Assessment of Drug Interaction Potential and Concomitant Dosing Pattern on Targeted Toxicities in Pediatric Cancer Patients

被引:15
|
作者
Barrett, Jeffrey S. [1 ]
Patel, Dimple [1 ]
Dombrowsky, Erin [1 ]
Bajaj, Gaurav [1 ]
Skolnik, Jeffrey M. [2 ]
机构
[1] Childrens Hosp Philadelphia, Dept Pediat, Div Clin Pharmacol & Therapeut, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[2] AstraZeneca LP, Wilmington, DE USA
来源
AAPS JOURNAL | 2013年 / 15卷 / 03期
关键词
drug interaction; pediatric oncology; pharmacotherapy; toxicity; ACTIVE SURVEILLANCE; INFORMATION; CHILDREN; NETWORK; SAFETY; PHARMACOGENOMICS; THERAPY; SYSTEM; COSTS;
D O I
10.1208/s12248-013-9489-z
中图分类号
R9 [药学];
学科分类号
1007 ;
摘要
This investigation evaluated the impact of potential drug interactions on the incidence of reported toxicities seen with common dosing patterns in children with cancer, with the intent of being able to screen and reduce the incidence of adverse drug reactions (ADRs) in the future. Toxicity reported in pediatric cancer patients treated at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia from 2004 to 2010 were abstracted from a cancer tumor registry and merged with drug order profiles from the medical record system. Analysis datasets were created in SAS and permutation algorithms were used to identify pairwise drug combinations associated with specific toxicity occurrence. Relative risk of toxicity based on dosing pattern was assessed via comparison to control patients. A total of 326 of 1,713 patients (19%) had reportable toxicities. Neutrophil count decreases and alanine aminotransferase increases represented the highest occurring, corresponding to 28.8% and 31.9% prevalence among patients reporting toxicity, respectively. Of coadministered drug pairs, acetaminophen-diphenhydramine occurred most frequently; however, methotrexate-vincristine was the highest occurring pair linked to a single toxicity (hepatotoxicity). Toxicity was highly associated with the diagnoses of leukemia (52.1%) or neuroblastoma (28.5%). Comparison of the dosing interval (<= 30 versus >30 min) suggested that risk of toxicity can be associated with the timing of coadministration, with <= 30 min increasing the risk of hepatotoxicity with fentanyl-midazolam and methotrexate-midazolam combinations. Knowledge of drug interactions in children with cancer may help reduce the incidence of ADRs by providing pharmacotherapy options that may reduce the likelihood of toxicity.
引用
收藏
页码:775 / 786
页数:12
相关论文
共 10 条
  • [1] Risk Assessment of Drug Interaction Potential and Concomitant Dosing Pattern on Targeted Toxicities in Pediatric Cancer Patients
    Jeffrey S. Barrett
    Dimple Patel
    Erin Dombrowsky
    Gaurav Bajaj
    Jeffrey M. Skolnik
    The AAPS Journal, 2013, 15 : 775 - 786
  • [2] Design of a Drug-Drug Interaction Study of Vincristine With Azole Antifungals in Pediatric Cancer Patients Using Clinical Trial Simulation
    van Hasselt, J. G. Coen
    van Eijkelenburg, Natasha K. A.
    Beijnen, Jos H.
    Schellens, Jan H. M.
    Huitema, Alwin D. R.
    PEDIATRIC BLOOD & CANCER, 2014, 61 (12) : 2223 - 2229
  • [3] Prevalence of potential drug interactions in Thai patients receiving simvastatin: The causality assessment of musculoskeletal adverse events induced by statin interaction
    Siriangkhawut, Methira
    Tansakul, Patthana
    Uchaipichat, Verawan
    SAUDI PHARMACEUTICAL JOURNAL, 2017, 25 (06) : 823 - 829
  • [4] Assessment of potential peritonitis risk factors in pediatric patients receiving maintenance peritoneal dialysis
    Heather L. Wasik
    Mahima Keswani
    Raj Munshi
    Alicia Neu
    Troy Richardson
    Bradley Warady
    Pediatric Nephrology, 2023, 38 : 4119 - 4125
  • [5] Assessment of potential peritonitis risk factors in pediatric patients receiving maintenance peritoneal dialysis
    Wasik, Heather
    Keswani, Mahima
    Munshi, Raj
    Neu, Alicia
    Richardson, Troy
    Warady, Bradley
    PEDIATRIC NEPHROLOGY, 2023, 38 (12) : 4119 - 4125
  • [6] Prevalence of Acid-Reducing Agents (ARA) in Cancer Populations and ARA Drug-Drug Interaction Potential for Molecular Targeted Agents in Clinical Development
    Smelick, Gillian S.
    Heffron, Timothy P.
    Chu, Laura
    Dean, Brian
    West, David A.
    DuVall, Scott L.
    Lum, Bert L.
    Budha, Nageshwar
    Holden, Scott N.
    Benet, Leslie Z.
    Frymoyer, Adam
    Dresser, Mark J.
    Waret, Joseph A.
    MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS, 2013, 10 (11) : 4055 - 4062
  • [7] Prevalence study on potential drug-drug interaction in cancer patients in Piacenza hospital's Onco-Haematology department
    Vecchia, Stefano
    Orlandi, Elena
    Confalonieri, Corrado
    Damonti, Enrico
    Riva, Alessandra
    Sartori, Alessia
    Cavanna, Luigi
    JOURNAL OF ONCOLOGY PHARMACY PRACTICE, 2018, 24 (07) : 490 - 493
  • [8] Drug Interaction Potential of Trastuzumab Emtansine (T-DM1) Combined with Pertuzumab in Patients With HER2-Positive Metastatic Breast Cancer
    Lu, Dan
    Burris, Howard A., III
    Wang, Bei
    Dees, E. Claire
    Cortes, Javier
    Joshi, Amita
    Gupta, Manish
    Yi, Joo-Hee
    Chu, Yu-Waye
    Shih, Ted
    Fang, Liang
    Girish, Sandhya
    CURRENT DRUG METABOLISM, 2012, 13 (07) : 911 - 922
  • [9] Potential drug-drug interaction and its determinants among patients with cancer receiving chemotherapy in oncology centres of Northwest Ethiopia: an institutional-based cross-sectional study
    Wondm, Samuel Agegnew
    Tamene, Fasil Bayafers
    Gubae, Kale
    Dagnew, Samuel Berihun
    Worku, Asres Agegnehu
    Belachew, Eyayaw Ashete
    BMJ OPEN, 2023, 13 (12):
  • [10] Assessment of Health Care Utilization and Cost of Targeted Drug Delivery and Conventional Medical Management vs Conventional Medical Management Alone for Patients With Cancer-Related Pain
    Stearns, Lisa J.
    Narang, Sanjeet
    Albright, Robert E., Jr.
    Hammond, Krisstin
    Xia, Ying
    Richter, Heather Basara
    Paramanandam, Gobi K.
    Haagenson, Kelly K.
    Doth, Alissa H.
    JAMA NETWORK OPEN, 2019, 2 (04) : e191549