Management of polypharmacy and potential drug-drug interactions in people with HIV and cancer: insights from a 4-year multidisciplinary clinic experience.
Dario Cattaneo, Anna Lisa Ridolfo, Davide Dalu, Chiara Pruneri, Andrea Giacomelli, Maria Vittoria Cossu, Lorenzo Ruggieri, Cinzia Fasola, Aurora Civati, Alberto Dolci, Nicla La Verde, Spinello Antinori, Andrea Gori, Cristina Gervasoni
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: People with HIV and cancer (PWHC) are often treated with different combinations of antiretroviral and oncology drugs, frequently associated with other co-medications; this significantly increases the risk of potential drug-drug interactions (DDIs).
Research design and methods: A prospective observational study has been carried out from May 2020 to May 2024 to describe the management of therapies in PWHC in an outpatient clinic.
Results: 140 PWHC treated with 42 different antiretroviral and 59 oncology regimens were enrolled, resulting in the identification of 410 DDIs. Of these, 8% were scored as red-flag DDIs). Among antiretroviral medications, 77% of red-flag DDIs involved ritonavir or cobicistat. Paclitaxel was the oncology drug most frequently associated with red-flag-DDIs (77%). Proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) were involved in 19% of red-flag and 32 of orange-flag DDIs. The most frequent recommendations included performing an electrocardiogram (38%), conducting therapeutic drug monitoring (31%), discontinuing PPIs (29%) and/or adjusting the timing of drug intake (28%).
Conclusions: A high prevalence of polypharmacy and clinically relevant DDIs was observed in our cohort of PWHC. A multidisciplinary team could play a pivotal role in optimizing pharmacological therapies in this clinical setting, for example, by reducing the use of PPIs and booster-based antiretroviral regimens.