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Mechanisms of Drug Interactions

Mechanisms of Drug Interactions

Mechanisms of Drug Interactions

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Mechanisms: Overview - Med Mixology 101

  • Drug Interaction (DI): Drug's effect modified by another substance (drug, food, herb).
  • Primary Mechanisms:
    • Pharmacokinetic (PK): Body's action on drug altered ("ADME").
      • Absorption: e.g., Chelation, pH changes.
      • Distribution: Protein binding displacement.
      • Metabolism: CYP450 enzyme induction/inhibition.
      • Excretion: Altered renal/biliary clearance.
    • Pharmacodynamic (PD): Drug's action on body modified.
      • Receptor interactions (synergism, antagonism).
      • Post-receptor effects.
    • Pharmaceutical: Physical/chemical incompatibility (e.g., IV admixtures).
  • Key Outcomes: ↑Toxicity or ↓Efficacy.

⭐ Most clinically significant drug interactions involve alterations in drug metabolism via CYP450 enzyme induction or inhibition (Pharmacokinetic).

Mechanisms: PK (AD) - Entry & Spread Sabotage

  • Absorption (Entry Sabotage)
    • Altered Gastric pH:
      • Antacids (↑pH) ↓ absorption of acidic drugs (e.g., ketoconazole, iron).
      • Acidic environment (stomach) favors acidic drug absorption.
    • Chelation/Complexation:
      • Tetracyclines, Fluoroquinolones + Ca²⁺, Mg²⁺, Fe²⁺/³⁺, Al³⁺ (in antacids, dairy, iron preps) → ↓ absorption. 📌 "TFs bind Cations" (Tetracyclines, Fluoroquinolones bind Cations).
    • Altered Gut Motility:
      • Prokinetics (e.g., metoclopramide): ↑ motility → ↓ absorption of slowly absorbed drugs (e.g., digoxin); ↑ for rapidly absorbed (e.g., paracetamol).
      • Anticholinergics: ↓ motility → opposite effects.
    • P-glycoprotein (P-gp) Efflux Pump Modulation:
      • Inducers (e.g., rifampicin): ↑ P-gp efflux → ↓ absorption of substrates (e.g., digoxin).
      • Inhibitors (e.g., verapamil): ↓ P-gp efflux → ↑ absorption of substrates (e.g., digoxin).
  • Distribution (Spread Sabotage)
    • Protein Binding Displacement:
      • Highly protein-bound drugs (e.g., warfarin, phenytoin, sulfonamides) can displace each other from albumin.
      • Aspirin displaces warfarin → ↑ free warfarin → ↑ bleeding risk.
      • ⭐ > Displacement is clinically significant mainly for drugs with >90% protein binding, small Volume of Distribution (Vd), and narrow therapeutic index.
    • Altered Tissue Uptake/Binding:
      • Digoxin + Quinidine: Quinidine displaces digoxin from tissue binding sites & inhibits P-gp → ↑ plasma digoxin levels → toxicity.

Mechanisms: PK (ME) - Metabolism & Exit Mayhem

Metabolism (Biotransformation): Primarily hepatic; alters drug structure.

  • Enzyme Induction: ↑Metabolism. Effect: ↓Drug levels/failure or ↑Toxic metabolite. Onset: Slow.
    • 📌 Inducers: CRAP GPS (Carbamazepine, Rifampicin, Alcohol (chronic), Phenytoin, Griseofulvin, Phenobarbitone, Sulfonylureas/Smoking/St. John's Wort).
  • Enzyme Inhibition: ↓Metabolism. Effect: ↑Drug levels/toxicity. Onset: Rapid.
    • 📌 Inhibitors: SICKFACES.COM Group (Sodium valproate, Isoniazid, Cimetidine, Ketoconazole, Fluconazole, Alcohol (acute), Chloramphenicol, Erythromycin, Sulfonamides, Ciprofloxacin, Omeprazole, Metronidazole, Grapefruit juice).
  • CYP450: Main system; CYP3A4 for ~50% drugs. Genetic variants (CYP2D6, CYP2C19) → varied response.

⭐ Grapefruit juice (CYP3A4 inhibitor) ↑ levels & toxicity of statins, Calcium channel blockers, cyclosporine.

Excretion (Elimination): Primarily renal.

  • Renal:
    • Filtration: unbound drug.
    • Secretion: active; competition (Probenecid + Penicillin → ↑Penicillin).
    • Reabsorption: pH-dependent ion trapping.
      • Acidic drugs (Aspirin): Alkalinize urine (NaHCO₃) for ↑Excretion.
      • Basic drugs (Amphetamine): Acidify urine (NH₄Cl) for ↑Excretion.
  • Biliary & Enterohepatic Circulation:
    • Bile excretion, gut reabsorption → prolongs action (Digoxin, OCPs).
    • Antibiotics may ↓ OCP efficacy.

Drug Metabolism and Detoxification Pathway

Mechanisms: PD - Target Site Tussles

  • Drugs interact at same/related target sites, altering cellular/physiological response.
  • Receptor Site Competition:
    • Competitive Antagonism: Naloxone (antagonist) displaces morphine (agonist) at µ-opioid receptors.
    • Partial vs. Full Agonist: Buprenorphine (partial agonist) can ↓ efficacy of morphine (full agonist) if co-administered.
  • Allosteric Modulation:
    • Drugs bind to different sites on one receptor complex, modifying the primary ligand's effect.
    • E.g., Benzodiazepines & Barbiturates on GABA-A receptor (enhance GABAergic inhibition, ↑Cl⁻ influx).
  • Physiological (Functional) Antagonism:
    • Two drugs act on different receptors/pathways, producing opposing physiological effects on the same system.
    • E.g., Histamine (H1; bronchoconstriction) vs. Adrenaline (β2; bronchodilation).

⭐ Co-administration of Sumatriptan (5-HT1D agonist) and Ergotamine derivatives is contraindicated due to synergistic vasoconstriction (risk of severe coronary/cerebral ischemia); allow at least a 24-hour interval between them.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Pharmacokinetic (PK) interactions alter drug ADME (Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism, Excretion).
  • Pharmacodynamic (PD) interactions at target sites: synergism, antagonism, additive effects.
  • CYP450 enzyme induction (e.g., rifampicin) ↓ drug levels, reducing efficacy.
  • CYP450 enzyme inhibition (e.g., ketoconazole) ↑ drug levels, increasing toxicity risk.
  • P-glycoprotein (P-gp) modulation impacts drug absorption and cellular efflux.
  • Altered absorption: chelation (e.g., tetracyclines + antacids) or pH changes reduce bioavailability.
  • Protein binding displacement (e.g., warfarin by NSAIDs) ↑ free drug concentration and effect.

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