WASHINGTON,
May 9 -- One-fifth of patients with schizophrenia receive prescriptions
for drugs that can cause dangerous interactions when taken in
combination, a researcher said here.
Significant adverse effects
were rare, but between 18% and 22% of Ohio Medicaid patients under
treatment for schizophrenia were given prescriptions for an
antipsychotic and one or more other drugs with well-known interaction
potential by the same physician or pharmacy, reported Jeff Guo, Ph.D.,
of the University of Cincinnati.
What's more, 11% to 12% of
patients received prescriptions for such dangerous drug combinations
from the same provider on the same day, Dr. Guo told attendees at the
American Psychiatric Association meeting.
Action Points
- Explain
to interested patients that the study found about 20% of schizophrenic
patients got prescriptions for drugs that can interact with other drugs
they're taking.
- Note that this study was
published as an abstract and presented as a poster at a conference.
These data and conclusions should be considered to be preliminary until
published in a peer-reviewed journal.
"That
shouldn't happen," he said, because the interactions analyzed in the
study have been described extensively in the medical literature.
Dr. Guo and colleagues
analyzed Medicaid data on 27,909 patients in Ohio from 2000 to 2003,
searching for simultaneous prescriptions of antipsychotic drugs with
other medications that are known to have potentially dangerous
interactions with the antipsychotic.
They found that more than 6,400 patients received potentially risky drug combinations.
The combinations included:
- Aripiprazole (Abilify) with ketoconazole (Nizoral)
- Clozapine (Clozaril) with ritonavir (Norvir)
- Clozapine with fluvoxamine (Luvox)
- Haloperidol (Haldol) with lithium
- Risperidone (Risperdol) with fluoxetine (Prozac)
Comorbidities
likely to require drug treatment were common, the data showed.
Depression, anxiety, diabetes, and hypertension were each diagnosed in
more than 10% of patients in the study.
Several comorbidities
were significantly more common among patients receiving dangerous drug
combinations according to multiple regression analysis. They included
depression (P=0.001), substance abuse (P=0.0003), anxiety (P=0.0003), hyperlipidemia (P=0.008) and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (P=0.028).
Dr.
Guo said actual incidents of adverse events stemming from interactions
were very uncommon. He and his colleagues identified 109 episodes among
the 6,808 patients receiving risky drug combinations, or about 1.7%.
They defined adverse
events as those known to have potentially severe or life-threatening
consequences, such as extrapyramidal symptoms, increased seizure risk,
QT interval prolongation, and arrhythmias.
Among the actual
interaction-related adverse events identified in the study, the
researchers found the average treatment cost was $10,511 over the 90
days following the episode's onset.
The 90-day cost for
other patients -- including those who received risky combinations but
did not have adverse effects -- was less than $1,900.
Combinations with major
interaction potential were prescribed simultaneously by the same
clinician in 18.9% of patients. Pharmacies dispensed such combinations
in 22.1% of patients.
In about half of these
cases, the combinations were provided by the same clinician or pharmacy
on the same day: 11.3% of patients received same-day prescriptions from
clinicians and 12.2% had drugs dispensed on the same day from the same
pharmacy.
"The take-home message
to physicians is that we need to prevent these drug-interaction pairs,
we need to educate physicians more," Dr. Guo said.
David Baron, D.O., of
Temple University in Philadelphia and program chair of the meeting,
agreed that more should be done to prevent drug interactions.
"It's not well taught in medical schools and is so important," he said.
"The
essence of this poster ... carries beyond schizophrenia," he added. Dr.
Baron argued that every physician who prescribes drugs needs to pay
attention to the potential for drug-drug interactions.
He said technologies are
now available that flag drug combinations with interaction potential,
but they have only just begun to be incorporated into real-world
practice.
"We've got a long way to go with that," Dr. Baron said.
The study was funded by Ortho-McNeil Janssen Scientific Affairs. No potential conflicts of interest were reported. |