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Title: Bez nadpisu


1
Pharmacotherapeutic complications
2009 Martin terba, PharmD. PhD. Department
of Pharmacology
2
Pharmacotherapeuticcomplications
  • Adverse and toxic effects of drugs
  • Drug interactions (drug-drug)
  • Food and drug interactions
  • Drug dependence and abuse
  • There is no ideal drug which is free of risks of
    pharmacotherapeutic complications
  • The knowledge and understanding of
    pharmacotherapeutic risks is essential for safe
    use of drugs in clinical practice
  • Consequences of pharmacotherapeutic complications
  • Health related
  • Legal
  • Ethic
  • Economic

3
Adverse and toxic effects of drugs
4
Adverse ? toxic reactionsterminology
  • Is far from being unified
  • Unwanted, adverse, side or toxiceffects/reactions
  • Effects (of drugs) vs reaction (of patients)
  • adverse drug reaction (WHO def.) unintended and
    noxious (harmful) response that occurs at normal
    doses of the drug used for prophylaxis, diagnosis
    and treatment of diseases
  • A, B, C, D, E CLASSIFICATION !!!
  • They often require change of dose/dosage schedule
    or drug withdrawal.
  • Sometimes Side effects (collateral effects) are
    distinguished the weak form of the adverse
    effect which is unpleasant but generally
    acceptable. The marked changes in dosage schedule
    or drug withdrawal are usually not necessarily.
  • E.g. weak sedation with H1-antihistamines,
    constipation with opioids, dry mouth with
    antimuscarinics
  • Attention! The term side effects is often used as
    a synonym to adverse effects.

5
Adverse ? toxic reactionsterminology
  • Toxic drug reaction
  • Unintended, primarily harmful and reactions
    occurring at high (supratherapeutic) doses and/or
    after long treatment (acute or chronic overdose).
  • Toxic effects are often associated with
    morphologic changes which might be irreversible.
  • Reasons
  • Iatrogenic intoxication medication error,
    critical situations when high drug doses are
    needed
  • Non-compliance and patients errors (multiple
    pharm. prep. with same active drug),
    self-administration (overdose) in children
  • Suicidal attempts (antidepressants...)
  • Paracelsus only the dose makes the difference
    between the drug and poison
  • Precise preclinical characterization of toxic
    drug effects is a mandatory part of the request
    for approval of the drug for clinical
    investigation and the same applies for final
    approval for its clinical use

6
Adverse drug reactions
7
Adverse effectsType A (augmented)
  • Are induced by
  • same pharmacological mechanisms as the
    therapeutic effects
  • By increase of the therapeutic or other
    pharmacological effect of the drug
  • Is directly dose-dependent (or plasma
    concentration dependent)
  • It is mostly associated with inappropriate dosage
    schedule (inappropriately high dose and/or short
    dosing interval)
  • It can arise from changes in drug
    pharmacokinetics (e.g., impaired drug elimination
    or plasma protein binding)
  • As a result of the pathology (kidney, liver
    failure and hypoalbuminemia)
  • As a result of aging (e.g. Lower renal
    elimination in elderly)
  • It can arise from changes in drug
    pharmacodynamics
  • Predisposition due to the concomitant pathology
  • pay appropriate attention on CONTRAINDICATIONS
  • Or patient non-compliance (e.g. failure to follow
    all instructions)
  • Are well predictable with respect to both their
    clinical manifestation and probability of onset
  • Type A is the most frequent type of adverse
    effects (76)
  • They have relatively less dangerous outcomes with
    lower rate of mortality

8
Adverse effects Type A (augmented)
  • Examples
  • Anticoagulants (e.g., wafarin, heparin)
    bleeding
  • Antihypertensives (e.g.. a1-antagonists)
    hypotension
  • Antidiabetics (e.g. insulin) - hypoglycemia
  • ?1-blockers (e.g. metoprolol)
  • Symptomatic heart failure inpatients with
    previous systolic dysfunction
  • Bronchoconstriction in patients with COPD
  • Antiepileptics blocking Na channel (e.g.,
    phenytoin) neurological symptoms - vertigo,
    ataxia, confusion
  • Intervention dose reduction in most cases, use
    of antagonist in serious circumstances
  • Prevention dose titration, adverse effects
    monitoring, pharmacotherapy monitoring (PK and PD
    principle)

9
Adverse effects Type B (bizzare)
  • Develop on the basis of
  • Immunological reaction on a drug (allergy)
  • Genetic predisposition (idiosyncratic reactions)
  • Have no direct relationship to
  • the dose of the drug
  • The pharmacological mechanism of drug action
  • Are generally unexpected and therefore
    unpredictable
  • They appear with much lower frequency (0,1-0,01)
  • Have more serious clinical outcomes with higher
    overall mortality
  • Intervention instant drug withdrawal,
    symptomatic treatment
  • pharmacological approach in allergy
    antihistamines, adrenalin (epinephrine) ,
    glucocorticoids
  • Prevention troublesome, the risks can be reduced
    by dutiful drug-related anamnesis, by avoiding
    certain drugs with known significant risk of
    B-type reactions
  • Allergy dermatological testing, in vitro testing
    (mixed outcomes), desensitization
  • Idiosyncratic reactions genotyping, phenotyping

10
Adverse effects - Type B Allergic reactions
  • Based on immunological mechanism
  • They require previous exposition before actual
    manifestation
  • Molecular weight of most drugs is low (Mrlt1000)
    which is NOT enough for direct immunogenicity
  • Exception peptides and proteins of non-human
    origin
  • Immunogenicity can be acquired
  • By binding of LMW drug (as a hapten) on the
    macromolecular carrier
  • Covalent bond is usually needed
  • Carrier is usually protein e.g.. Plasma
    proteins (albumin) or proteins on the cell
    surface
  • E.g. penicillin is covalently bound to albumin
  • LMW drug (prohapten) is metabolized to the
    reactive metabolite, which acts as a hapten and
    is bound to the carrier
  • E.g., sulfamethoxazole
  • LMW drug interacts with receptors of immunity
    systems
  • Direct binding to T-cell receptors (TCR),
    enhanced by MHC system

11
Adverse effects - Type B Allergic reactions
  • Route of administration impact
  • Higher probability of both occurrence and
    increased severity after parenteral (injectional)
    administration !)
  • mind the effectiveness of antigen presenting
    process
  • Relatively high probability after application on
    the skin
  • Significantly lower probability after p.o.
    administration
  • Not only a active substance can be responsible
    for allergic reactions
  • excipients antimicrobial agents, preservants
    - E.g., parabens
  • - must be listed in the Summary of Product
    Characteristics (SPC!)
  • - In the case of known allergy to common
    excipients the generic prescription should be
    avoided
  • Drug decomposition products, impurities etc.
    they are under control of the national
    authorities (FDA)
  • - appropriate storage, use and expiration
    should be followed

12
Adverse effects - Type B Allergic reactions -
classification
  • They are divided according to the prevailing
    immunological mechanism into 4 groups
    (Gell-Coombs classification system)
  • TYPE I (IgE-mediated, immediate reactions)
  • TYPE II (cytotoxic reactions)
  • TYPE III (immunocomplex reactions)
  • TYPE IV (delayed, cell-mediated reactions)
  • Newer classification
  • Taking into account T-cell subtypes (Th1/Th2,
    Cytotox. T-cells), specificity of the cytokine
    signaling and different effectors (monocytes,
    eaosinophils, CD8 T-cells, neutrophils)
  • TYP IV a, b ,c, d

13
Allergic reactions TYPE IIgE-mediated
  • Sensitisation phase
  • Immunogenic complex (drug-carrier) induces
    production of specific IgE antibodies
  • IgE ab is bound on the cell surface of mast cells
    and basophiles via high affinity receptors
  • Allergic reaction triggering
  • After re-exposition, the drugcarrier is directly
    bound on the IgE
  • Cross-linking of the IgE
  • Degranulation of the mast cells release of
    histamine, leukotriens, prostaglandins ?
    inflammatory reaction!
  • Rubor, calor, dolor a tumor
  • Clinical manifestation urticaria, itching,
    nose/eye hyperemia and secretion, soft-tissue
    swelling, bronchospasm, anaphylactic reaction
  • Time window after previous sensitization the
    onset is very rapid one (seconds to minutes)
  • Examples penicilins, cephalosporins, quinolones,
    macrolides, streptokinase, thiazides, salicylates
    and skeletal muscle relaxants, local anesthetics

14
Allergic reactions TYPE IIgE-mediated
  • Anaphylactic reactions
  • More complex (multiorgan) and more serious type I
    reactions
  • Onset mostly within 15 min after drug
    administration
  • First symptoms itching (mostly palmar, plantar a
    axilles)
  • Thereafter diffuse erythema (first on the trunk
    becomes generalized), urticaria
  • Soft-tissue edema (peri - orbital, -oral, -
    genital)
  • Laryngeal edema (difficulties with speaking,
    swallowing, breathing)
  • Pressure on the chest and dyspnoe bronchospasm
  • Hypotension, arrhythmias
  • 75 of cases are due to the penicillins
  • Anaphylactic shock
  • Shock or shock-like status as a result of fully
    blown multiorgan anaphylaxis with possible
    progression into the total collapse
  • Lethal in 1-2 cases
  • Risk factors higher dose, asthma, atopic
    anamnesis, elderly
  • pharmacological treatment adrenalin
    glucocorticoids i.v., antihistamines

15
Allergic reactions TYPE IICytotoxic
  • Drug (hapten) is bound on the surface of target
    cells (these are carriers)
  • Antibody production IgG (IgG1 and IgG3), rarely
    IgM
  • After re-exposition the drug is bound again on
    the cell surface and IgG is attached
  • The activation of the complement system and NK
    cells execute the cytotoxic reactions
  • The cell is destructed and/or taken up by the RES
  • The main target cells erythrocytes, leukocytes,
    trombocytes, hematopoietic cells
  • Clinical outcome anemia or - penia
  • Drugs quinidine, heparin, sulfonamides,
    cephalosporins, penicillins, anticonvulsants.

16
Allergic reactions TYPE IICytotoxic
  • Hemolytic anemia
  • Associated with cephalosporins, penicilins,
    quinidine, levodopa, methyldopa, some NSAIDs
  • Symptoms like in other anemia jaundice, dark
    urine
  • Lab. picture erythrocytopenia, reticulocytosis
    and billirubin (unconjugated) hemoglobin a
    hemosiderin in urine
  • Thrombocytopenia
  • Associated with heparin (up to 5 patients),
    quinine quinidine, sulfonamides and biologicals
    (-mabs, e.g., bevacizumab)
  • Symptoms petechial bleeding to the skin and
    mucosa, GIT and urogenital tract bleeding
  • Reversibility in usually in 3-5 days

17
Allergic reactions TYPE IIIImmunocomplex
reactions
  • Drug-carrier or drug as a chimeric protein
    induces production of IgG antibodies
  • Formation of IgG-drug(carrier) complexes
  • Normally these complexes are cleared by the RES
    with only some decrease in the clinical response
  • In some circumstances (huge amount of complexes,
    deficient decomposition system) it results to
    development of symptomatic reaction
  • Time window 1-3 weeks after exposition
  • Epidemiology 1-3100 000 patients

18
Allergic reactions TYPE IIIImmunocomplex
reactions
  • Clinical manifestation vasculitis and/or serum
    sickness,
  • Urticaria, dermatol. affections, pruritus, fever,
    arthritis/arthralgia, glomerulonephritis,
    lyfmadenopathy
  • Serum sickness first described after passive
    immunization with animal serum
  • Within 4-10 day the abs were produced and formed
    complexes with antigenic proteins.
  • These complexes were deposited in postcapillary
    venules and attracted neutrophils
  • Development of inflammation with release of
    proteolytic enzymes destructing vessel and
    surrounding tissue
  • Drugs chimeric abs (e.g., infliximab) or
    cephalosporins (cefaclor, cefalexin),
    amoxicillin, sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim,
    NSAIDs, amiodaron

19
Allergic reactions TYPE IV Delayed,
cell-mediated reaction
  • Cellular reaction mediated by T-cells
  • General principle drug-carrier complex is
    presented by APC to T-cells with their following
    clonal proliferation
  • After re-exposition the drug gets into contact
    with T-cells with release of specific cytokines
    and inflammatory mediators which activate the
    target cells
  • Clinical manifestation mostly drug-related
    contact dermatitis (rash) in many forms
    pruritus, tuberculin reaction, maculopapular
    exanthema or e.g. allergic hepatitis
  • Drugs aminoglycosides, penicillins..
  • Time window 2-8 days

20
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21
Pseudoalergic reactions
  • Are NOT immune reactions
  • The are induced by direct activation of mast
    cells or by displacing histamine from granules
  • IgE are NOT increased
  • Are as frequent as true type I reactions
    (IgE-mediated)
  • Clinical manifestation is very close or even
    indistinguishable from type I reactions
  • Mostly less severe (erythema, urticaria)
  • Onset can be slower then in true type I
  • May require higher doses
  • Anaphylactoid forms can occur
  • Drugs NSAIDs, vancomycin, opiates, radiocontrast
    agents

22
Pseudoalergic urticaria
23
Adverse effectsType B idiosyncratic reactions
  • Do not require any prior sensitization
  • Are primarily genetically determined deviations
    in the human metabolism or biotransformation of
    the drugs
  • atypical acetylcholinesterase (AChE) abnormally
    slow degradation of the suxamethonium
    (depolarizing peripheral myorelaxans)
  • Apnoe is lasting up to 2 hours instead of 2min
  • Deficient glucosa-6-phosphate dehydrogenase
    higher susceptibility of Ery to hemolytic anemia
    development ( e.g., in quinidine)

24
Examples of Type A a B adverse reactions
25
Adverse effects Type C Chronic (continous) use
  • Are not as frequent as type A
  • They are mostly associated with cumulative-long
    term exposition inducing a toxic response
  • Mostly the accumulation is not humoral but is
    that of functional and/or ultrastructural changes
    induced by a drug
  • Direct relationship to the cumulative dose
  • Example suppression of the hypothalamus-pituitary
    gland-adrenal cortex by long term systemic
    treatment with glucocorticoids
  • Toxicity of the drug after long-term treatment
    with therapeutic doses
  • Analgesic (NSAID) nephropathy interstitial
    nephritis, papillary sclerosis, necrosis,
  • Mechanism unclear, deficit of prostaglandins?!
    NSAIDs inhibit their formation

26
Adverse effects Type C Chronic (continous) use
  • Anthracycline cardiotoxicity with increasing
    cumulative dose the degenerative changes within
    cardiomyocytes occurs (loss of myofibrils,
    vacuolization of cytoplasm,
  • dilated cardiomyopathy with HF
  • Ethiopathogenesis unknown, ROS?,
    mitochondriopathy, apoptosis.
  • Treatment troublesome, largely irreversible in
    higher cumulative doses
  • General prevention cumulative dose reduction,
    limitation of time of exposure, monitoring,
    prevention of non-compliance and drug abuse

27
Adverse effects Type D Delayed
  • They manifest themselves with significant delay
  • Teratogenesis,
  • Mutagenesis/cancerogenesis
  • others e.g., tardive dyskinesis during L-DOPA
    Parkinson disease treatment

28
Adverse effects Type D Teratogenicity
  • Drug induced deviation from normal prenatal
    development
  • Time window from zygota to birth
  • Possible consequences embryo/fetus death,
    morphologic malformations, functional defects and
    defects (incl. behavioral), developmental
    retardation
  • Prerequisite penetration of placental barrier
  • Small molecules (Mrlt 500), lipophilic enough
  • Utilization of endogenous transporting mechanisms
  • Protective mechanisms efflux transporters (P-gp)
    and CYP450
  • According to the materno-fetal distribution we
    distinguish drugs into 3 groups
  • Homogenous distribution between mother and fetus
    amoxicillin, morphine, paracetamol, nitrazepam
  • Higher concentration in foetus valproate,
    ketamine, diazepam
  • Higher concentration in mother prazosin,
    furosemide

29
Adverse effects Type D Teratogenicity
  • Teratogenic effects largely depends on the phase
    of intrauterine development
  • Blastogenesis (0.-14. day) mostly dead, or
    damage is compensated without further
    consequences Organogenesis (15.-90. day) gross
    anatomic malformations of different type
  • Fetal development (90.-280. day) no gross
    anatomic but rather different functional deficits
    of the target tissue (often CNS)
  • All drugs must be carefully tested for
    teratogenicity during their preclinical
    development
  • At least two animal species (one rodent and one
    non-rodent)
  • Interspecies differences in morphology of placenta

30
Adverse effects Type D Teratogenicity
  • Certain teratogens
  • Thalidomide phocomelia (flipper-like hands)
  • Antifolates abortus, suppression of
    hematopoiesis
  • Isoretinoin and vitamin A (high doses) heart
    malformation and hydrocephalon
  • Warfarin chondrodysplasa, facial abnormalities,
    CNS defects
  • Valproate defect of the neural tube spina
    bifida
  • Teratogens suspect
  • Tetracyclines teeth and bone defects
  • Lithium heart malformation
  • Glucocorticoids growth retardation, cleft
    palate
  • ACE-inhibitors renal failure in fetus,
    oligohydramnion, fetal hypotension,
    pulmonary hypoplasia or intrauterine death
  • Phenytoin fetal hydantoin syndrome
    (craniofacial malformations, microcephalon and
    cleft palate)
  • Carbamazepine craniofacial malformations

31
Adverse effects Type D Teratogenicity
thalidomide
32
Adverse effects Type D mutagenicity and
carcinogenicity
  • Mutation suddenly occurring and persisting
    change in the genome which is spreading further
    by cell replication
  • Some mutations may impair tight regulation of the
    cellular proliferation and differentiation
    resulting into the tumor formation
    carcinogenesis
  • 60-70 of carcinogenic events are induced by
    chemical compounds (i.e. also with drugs)
  • This is specifically important for most of
    anticancer drugs, especially for those directly
    interacting with DNA alkylating cytostatics,
    cisplatin etc
  • Risk of secondary malignancies !!!
  • Test for mutagenicity in vitro Ames test
    cultivation of S. typhimurium, i.e. strain which
    is unable to biosynthesize histidine (it must be
    supplied in the media).upon exposure to drug in
    histidine-free media it is sought whether any
    drug-induced mutation can allow the bacteria to
    synthesize histidine again
  • In vivo testing for carcinogenicity
    long-lasting, time and work-consuming tests,
    sometimes uneasy to predict translatability to
    humans (applies for suspicious drug intended for
    long-term use)

33
Adverse effects Type E End of use
  • Drug withdrawal syndromes and rebound phenomenons
  • Typical example sudden withdrawal of long term
    therapy with ?-blockers can induce rebound
    tachycardia and hypertension)
  • Reason Up-regulation of the receptors during
    chronic treatment)
  • Withdrawal of long-term systemic treatment with
    glucocorticoids adrenal insufficiency with risk
    of coma and death
  • Withdrawal syndrome in drug dependence
  • Prevention rather avoid abrupt withdrawals, slow
    decrease in dose is helpful, avoid long treatment
    with such drugs if possible

34
  • Adverse drug effects inpractice
  • According to Ritter (1995)
  • Up to 80 adverse reactions are of A type
  • 3 emergency cases
  • 2-3 in the care of GPs
  • In the hospital they make up to 10-20 of all
    treatments
  • mortality rate is 0,3-1 .
  • Additional costs!
  • Risk factors
  • age (newborns and young children, elderly)
  • females
  • liver and renal disease in anamnesis
  • any such adverse reaction in anamnesis
  • Onset
  • 1st-9th day after starting the pharmacotherapy

35
Most adverse reactions occur during the treatment
with DIGOXINE, ANTIBIOTICS, DIURETICS,
POSTASSIUM, ANALGESICS, SEDATIVES AND
NEUROLEPTICS, INSULIN, ASPIRIN, GLUCOCORTICOIDS,
ANTIHYPERTENSIVES AND WARFARIN. To recognize the
adverse reaction is of same importance as to be
able to make right diagnosis of a disease
36
TOXIC EFFECTS
37
Toxic drug effects
  • Are induced by high single doses or long-term
    therapy leading to high cumulative doses.
  • Doses/duration of treatment is supratherapeutic!
  • The safety for therapeutic use is defined by TI
  • Drugs with low TI values are approved to get in
    to the clinical practice only in the case of
    life-saving indications where risks do not
    overweight the benefits
  • They can be induced and manifested by
  • As extremely escalated therapeutic effects (e.g.,
    overdose with anticoagulant drugs induce
    life-threatening bleeding
  • By totally different mechanisms and symptoms with
    no relationship to pharmacological action
  • Covalent interactions often occur with
    destruction of biomolecules and histopathological
    findings which might be irreversible

38
Toxic effects
  • Possible molecular consequences of the
    drug-induced toxicity
  • ROS production (often the metabolite is reactive
    radical) with subsequent oxidative damage to
    biomolecules (lipids, proteins, DNA)
  • Ca2 overload activation of Ca-dependent
    proteases, Ca accumulation in mitochondria and
    impact on MPTP depolarization of mitochondria
  • Impaired ATP production
  • Direct impact on gene expression
  • Activation of proteolytic cascades
  • Triggering of apoptosis

39
Toxic effects
  • Prevention reduction of individual dose, number
    of individual dosage forms, monitoring of
    pharmacotherapy
  • Treatment
  • Non-specific treatment to prevent or reduce
    further drug absorption, to accelerate drug
    elimination and support of vital functions
  • Specific treatment with antidotes taking
    advantage of specific antagonisms (mostly
    pharmacological)

40
Evaluation of toxic effects of drugs
  • Overlap of pharmacology and toxicology
  • Paracelsus postulate
  • MUST involve in vivo testing on experimental
    animals
  • In vitro testing has only limited values for
    regulatory purposes
  • Indispensable part of preclinical files of each
    drug which should be
  • Approved for testing on human beings
  • Approved for use in clinical practice
  • Acute toxicity studies (TD50, LD50 TI
    determination), subchronic toxicity studies (90
    days) and chronic toxicity studies (at least 1
    year)
  • Choice of animal species, strain, age, sex is of
    critical importance
  • Control group receives only drug vehicle,
    otherwise all must be same as in the tested group
  • Animal randomization into the groups (tested and
    control)
  • After repeated administration testing the
    investigators look for the signs of drug
    accumulation, link to toxicokinetics
  • Evaluated parameters general toxicity e.g.,
    changes in appearance, behavior, weight gain
  • Identification of target organ toxicities using
    histopathological an biochemical, hematological
    approaches

41
Drugs and organ toxicity
  • Nephrotoxicity
  • Aminoglycosides, cyclosporin, ACE-inhibitors,
    NSAIDs, cisplatin, amphotericin B, paracetamol
  • Hepatotoxicity
  • Paracetamol, isoniazid, halothan, methotrexate
  • Neurotoxicity vinca alcaloids
  • Ototoxicity gentamicin, furosemide
  • Cardiotoxiicty
  • anthracyclines, trastuzumab, tytosinkinase
    inhibitors, catecholamines
  • digoxin, antiarrhythmics
  • GIT-toxicity NSAIDs, cytostatics
  • Phototoxicity piroxicam, diclofenac a
    sulfonamides, hydrochlorothiazide

42
Drugs and organ toxicity - nephrotoxicity
  • Special attention must be paid on elderly
    patients and patients with prior kidney disease
  • Renal function biomarker creatininemia
  • Aminoglycosides active (saturable) transport
    into the tubular cells
  • ROS production, lysosomal enlargement and
    phospholipids inside, apoptosis
  • tubular toxicity
  • Reduced glomerular filtration, increased
    creatinineamia, and blood urea renal failure!
  • Once daily
  • Special risks in newborn (esp. Immature)
  • TDM

43
Drugs and organ toxicity - nephrotoxicity
  • Tubular toxicity also in cisplatin, vankomycin
  • Endotelial toxicity cyclosporin, tacrolimus
  • Decreased renal perfusion (due to the
    vasoconstriction) NSAIDs, cyclosporin,
    tacrolimus, amphotericine B
  • Crystaluria sulfonamides, acyclovir
  • NSAIDs
  • Single high dose induced acute renal failure with
    oligouria (due to the vasoconstriction and drop
    in GF)
  • Chronic analgesic nephropathy papillary
    necrosis, chronic interstitial nephritis
    (ischemia?). Irreversibility !!!
  • Interstitial nephritis (rare) increased
    creatininemia with proteinuria (reversible,
    return to normal after 1-3 months

44
Drugs and organ toxicity - nephrotoxicity
  • Cyclosporin
  • Acute reversible renal dysfunction (due to the
    vasoconstriction)
  • Acute vasculopathy (non-inflammatory injury to
    arterioles and glomerulus)
  • Chronic nephropathy with interstitial fibrosis
  • Renal hypertension is frequent!!!!
  • Cisplatin acute and chronic renal failure
    (focal necrosis in in multiple segments of the
    nephron)
  • Paracetamol in overdose necrosis of cells of
    proximal tubules
  • ACE-inhibitors in higher doses, esp. captopril,
    in bilateral stenosis of renal artery
  • risk of severe acute renal failure

45
Drugs and organ toxicity - hepatotoxicity
  • The most important case paracetamol overdose
  • Paracetamol is a very safe drug in normal doses
    (OTC drug)
  • However, in overdose (10-15g in a healthy adults)
    it leads to life-threatening hepatotoxicity and
    nephrotoxicity
  • Responsible is a reactive metabolite
    N-acetyl-p-benzoquinon imin, which oversaturates
    its detoxification metabolism based on
    conjugation with GSH
  • This triggers a severe oxidative stress in
    hepatocytes which results in to the damage of
    biomolecules and necrotic cell death of
    hepatocyte
  • Risk factors age (more likely in children),
    alcoholism, liver disease in anamnesis
  • Treatment acetylcysteine i.v. ASAP donates SH
    to reduce GSH depletion in the liver

46
Drugs and organ toxicity - hepatotoxicity
  • Risk of hepatocellular necrosis also in halothan
    and isoniazid
  • Hepatic cirrhosis/fibrosis methotrexate after
    long-term use
  • Cholestatic hepatitis chlorpomazine, estrogens,
    cyclosporin

47
Hepatotoxicity of paracetamol
Ac-glucuronide Ac Ac-sulfate
Reactive electrophilic compound (NAPBQI)
GSH
Cell macromolecules (proteins)
GS-NAPBQI NAPBQI-protein
Ac-mercapturate Hepatic cell death
48
Drugs and organ toxicity - cardiotoxicity
  • Impaired cardiac function induction of
    arrhythmias
  • Most of antiarrhythmics have also
    proarhythmogenic effects
  • DAD after digoxin bigeminias, trigeminias etc
  • Methylxantins theophylline
  • Tricyclic antidepressants - amitriptyline
  • Drug-induced long QT syndrome - predisposition
    for polymorphic ventricular arrhythmias of the
    torsade de point type, which may be fatal
  • Safety pharmacology- QT interval testing in new
    drugs
  • Reason for drug withdrawal from market in many
    cases cisapride, terfenadine
  • The risk is present in some currently prescribed
    drugs drugs in psychiatry some antidepressants
    and antipsychotics, macrolides, fluoroquinolones

49
Drugs and organ toxicity - cardiotoxicity
  • Induction of cardiomyopathy and/or chronic heart
    failure
  • Anthracyclines, trastuzumab, tyrosinkinase
    inhibitors (sunitinib), tacrolimus, reverse
    transcriptase inhibitors
  • Anthracycline cardiotoxicity
  • Acute mostly subclinical ECG changes
  • Subacute myocarditis-pericarditis (rarely seen)
  • Chronic (within 1 year)
  • Delayed (late onset, 1-20 years after the
    chemotherapy)
  • Chronic and delayed forms depend on the
    cumulative dose
  • Options for prevention pharmacological
    cardioprotection with dexrazoxane, targeted
    distribution of anthracyclines (liposomes)
  • Mechanism of toxic action? The classic ROS and
    iron hypothesis but it is rather multifactorial
    and less sure
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