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Therapeutic Drug Monitoring and penicillin allergy (Duty of care with toxic drugs)

Therapeutic Drug Monitoring and penicillin allergy (Duty of care with toxic drugs). Dr Kieran Hand Consultant Pharmacist, Anti-infectives SUHT, November 2007. Why monitor drug levels?. Optimise dose regimen for individual patient Explain lack of efficacy Prevent / confirm toxicity

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Therapeutic Drug Monitoring and penicillin allergy (Duty of care with toxic drugs)

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  1. Therapeutic Drug Monitoring and penicillin allergy(Duty of care with toxic drugs) Dr Kieran Hand Consultant Pharmacist, Anti-infectives SUHT, November 2007

  2. Why monitor drug levels? • Optimise dose regimen for individual patient • Explain lack of efficacy • Prevent / confirm toxicity • Evaluate impact of drug interactions • Evaluate impact of low albumin • Evaluate impact of changes in organ function or fluid status • Check patient compliance

  3. Anti-epileptics Phenytoin, Carbamazepine, (Valproate) Antibiotics Gentamicin, Tobramycin Vancomycin, Teicoplanin Anti-psychotics Lithium Cardiac glycosides Digoxin Bronchodilators Aminophylline Theophylline Specialty drugs Drugs routinely monitored

  4. eQuest screen - Lithium

  5. eQuest screen - search

  6. eQuest screen - antibiotics

  7. Narrow therapeutic index

  8. When to sample – steady state

  9. The effect of loading dose – immediate efficacy

  10. Blood sampling and the distribution phase

  11. Anti-epileptics

  12. Phenytoin

  13. Phenytoin accumulation

  14. Phenytoin – key points • Saturable metabolism so increase dose carefully • Long half-life (1 day) so pointless to sample blood before one week if initiating oral therapy • Serum levels must be adjusted for abnormal albumin concentration – call a pharmacist (low albumin leads to plasma phenytoin level appearing low but tissue levels normal) • Susceptible to protein binding displacement (plasma level appears low but tissue levels normal) • Susceptible to liver enzyme inhibition and induction

  15. Carbamazapine

  16. Carbamazepine – key points • Autoinduces it’s own metabolism (one month) • Wider therapeutic index than phenytoin • Susceptible to liver enzyme induction or inhibition • Induces increased metabolism of other drugs

  17. Antibiotics

  18. Gentamicin extended interval dosing Concentration Time

  19. Reduced elimination MTC Concentration MEC Time

  20. Reduced elimination MTC Concentration MEC Time

  21. Gentamicin

  22. Gentamicin – key points • Gentamicin causes permanent renal failure if levels are kept above 1mg/L for a prolonged period of time • High-dose regimen (5mg/kg) equally effective as traditional dosing • High-dose regimen no more toxic than traditional dosing • See SUHTranet for exclusion criteria

  23. Vancomycin

  24. Vancomycin – key points • Activity related to time levels are above MIC for target pathogen • Vancomycin is rarely nephrotoxic if monitored carefully • Nephrotoxicity is usually associated with concurrent prescribing of other nephrotoxic drugs • ICU uses continuous infusion vancomycin

  25. Teicoplanin

  26. Teicoplanin – key points • Inferior efficacy to vancomycin • Frequently underdosed – associated with treatment failure • Levels sent off to Bristol - delay • Advantage of once-daily dosing • Reduce dose on 4th day if renal impairment • Less nephrotoxic than vancomycin • Expensive

  27. Cardiac glycosides

  28. Digoxin

  29. Digoxin - key points • Low potassium potentiates risk of arrhythmias • Maintenance dose usually guesstimated from weight and renal function • Pharmacist can provide more accurate estimate • Clinically significant interaction with amiodarone • Digibind® reduces mortality in overdose but phenytoin is a cheaper alternative in mild cases

  30. Antipsychotics

  31. Lithium

  32. Lithium – key points • Renal excretion • 100% filtered but 80% reabsorbed • Li+ reabsorption linked to Na+ reabsorption • Influenced by dehydration, sodium depletion, hypotension • Diuretics (e.g. thiazides) can increase Lithium levels dramatically • NSAIDs and ACEi’s can increase Li+ levels  toxicity

  33. Bronchodilators

  34. Theophylline /Aminophylline iv

  35. Theophylline / aminophylline key points • Theophylline concentration is increased in • Heart failure • Cirrhosis • Elderly • Liver enzyme inhibitors • Theophylline concentration is decreased by • Smoking • Social drinking • Liver enzyme inducers

  36. Specialty drugs for monitoring – seek expert advice • Immunosuppressants • Ciclosporin / Tacrolimus / Sirolimus • Methotrexate • Anti-epileptics • Valproate • Phenobarbitol • Ethosuximide • Tricyclic antidepressants • Amitriptyline, nortriptyline, imipramine etc

  37. Important concepts • You prescribe a toxic drug – you monitor it • Seek advice from the ward pharmacist or Medicines Info • Loading dose for drugs with long half-life • Distribution phase (when to sample blood after dose given) • Documenting sampling times • Steady state (when to check levels after start of therapy or change to therapy) • Actions: reducing dose or extending dosing interval • Slow-release brands are not easily interchangeable • Many TDM drugs are susceptible to serious drug interactions – caution if starting/stopping other drugs and check with pharmacist or BNF

  38. Penicillin allergy • Megan, 19-years-old, student • PC ‘Serious infection’ • Allergies ‘Penicillin – itchy rash and lips swollen’ • Rate the following antibiotics as: • Safe • Caution – perform risk assessment • Danger

  39. Clindamycin Amoxicillin Moxifloxacin Daptomycin Doxycycline Tazocin Azithromycin Gentamicin Metronidazole Ceftriaxone Vancomycin Flucloxacillin Meropenem Cefuroxime Augmentin Rifampicin Penicillin allergy

  40. Clindamycin Amoxicillin Moxifloxacin Daptomycin Doxycycline Tazocin Azithromycin Gentamicin Metronidazole Ceftriaxone Vancomycin Flucloxacillin Meropenem Cefuroxime Augmentin Rifampicin Penicillin allergy

  41. 10-20% of patients reporting a penicillin allergy are truly allergic (Salkind 2001 JAMA) Frequency of all ADRs to penicillin in general population is 0.7-10% Anaphylaxis occurs in between 1:6,500 and 1:25,000 penicillin courses History of atopy is not predictive of penicillin anaphylaxis but may  severity Patients on beta-blockers may be at increased risk of death if anaphylaxis occurs Understanding the classification of penicillin hypersensitivity reactions helps with risk assessment Facts about penicillin allergy

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