Ben Chadwick is a specialist registrar in acute medicine at the Royal Hampshire County Hospital, Winchester. Derek Waller is a consultant physician and senior lecturer in medicine and clinical pharmacology at Southampton University Hospitals NHS Trust (Southampton General Hospital, Southampton SO16 6YD, UK. E-mail: derek.waller{at}suht.swest.nhs.uk). Guy Edwards is an emeritus consultant at Southampton University Hospitals NHS Trust and Visiting Professor at Prince of Songkla University, Hat Yai, Thailand. He has in the past received research grants and lecture fees from, and been invited to national and international meetings by, the manufacturers of several psychotropic drugs.
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There are numerous known and potential interactions with psychotropic drugs, and many of them do not have clinically significant consequences. Most clinically important interactions involve drugs that have a narrow therapeutic index (a small difference between the therapeutic and toxic concentrations), for example lithium, phenytoin and warfarin (Table 1
and Box 1
). It is impossible to remember every potential interaction, or even those that are clinically significant. However, if the clinician has an understanding of the mechanisms underlying drug interactions, it is more likely that the possible consequences will be considered when selecting therapy.
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View this table: [in a new window] | Table 1 Types and examples of drug interactions |
| Box 1 Pharmacological and clinical considerations of psychotropic interactions Pharmacological
Clinical
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Drug interactions are usually classified as pharmaceutical, pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic (Table 1
).
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Synergistic interactions may be used therapeutically, for example in augmentation treatment of resistant depression with lithium and an anti-depressant, but often they are adverse. A common result is toxicity of the central nervous system (CNS) and hypertension or hypotension, which is discussed in more detail below, in the subsection Effects on the central nervous system. Depression of the CNS can also occur when alcohol and tricyclic antidepressants are taken concomitantly. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) increase the risk of gastrointestinal bleeding when taken with aspirin or other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, because of a synergistic inhibition of platelet aggregation.
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Absorption
Important clinical effects caused by changes in drug absorption are rarely seen in general medical or psychiatric practice. These interactions usually result from the binding of two drugs in the gut, preventing their absorption. This property is used therapeutically when activated charcoal is given following an overdose of tricyclic antidepressants. Charcoal adsorbs the drug in the gut, and thereby attenuates the effects of the overdose. An example of an undesirable interaction is the decreased absorption of phenothiazines or sulpiride when they are taken concurrently with antacids, leading to a reduced antipsychotic effect.
One drug may alter the rate of absorption of another. When paracetamol is taken with metoclopramide, the more rapid gastric emptying decreases the time to absorption. Conversely, drugs with antimuscarinic activity, such as tricyclic anti-depressants, delay gastric emptying and thus the rate of absorption of co-prescribed medication. However, for most drugs, other than analgesics, the rate of absorption is not critical to their efficacy.
Distribution
Protein binding
The most frequently recognised mechanism of interactions involving drug distribution is through altered protein binding. Many psychotropic drugs are bound to plasma proteins, but it is the non-protein-bound portion of the drug that is metabolically active. Reduced protein binding increases the free drug fraction and therefore the effect of the drug. Drugs that are highly protein bound (>90%), such as phenytoin, are most prone to interactions mediated by this mechanism. For example, diazepam displaces phenytoin from plasma proteins, resulting in an increased plasma concentration of free phenytoin and an increased risk of adverse effects. The effects of protein displacement are usually not of clinical significance in either general medical or psychiatric practice, as the metabolism of the affected drug increases in parallel with the free drug concentration. The result is that, although the plasma level of the free drug rises briefly, the increased metabolism rapidly restores the level to the previous steady state. Therefore any untoward effects of the interaction are normally short-lived.
Lysosomal trapping
Recently another mechanism of interaction involving drug distribution at a cellular level has been described. Tricyclic anti-depressants, SSRIs and aliphatic phenothiazines are basic lipophilic compounds that are taken up by acidic compartments in the cell. For some drugs, this principally involves association with phospholipids in the cell membrane, whereas others undergo lysosomal trapping within the cell. Tissues such as the lungs, liver and kidneys are rich in lysosomes (intracellular organelles containing lytic enzymes) and if a drug is susceptible to trapping, these tissues take up most of the drug in the body. Drugs that are trapped by lysosomes compete with each other for uptake into the organelles. Mutual inhibition of lysosomal trapping results in higher plasma drug concentrations. This will have the greatest effect on tissues with a low density of lysosomes, such as the heart. Organs with a low concentration of lysosomes would normally be exposed to low concentrations of drugs that undergo lysosomal trapping, but will have increased exposure if drug uptake is limited in tissues with a high concentration of lysosomes. This interaction may contribute to the increased cardiotoxicity of drugs such as thioridazine when co-prescribed with antidepressants (Daniel, 2003).
Within the brain, differences in lysosomal density among the various cells may also predispose to adverse drug interactions. Lysosomes are more numerous in neurons than astrocytes, and decreased trapping may increase exposure of cell surface receptors to the drug. It is not known whether this mechanism contributes to psychotropic drug interactions (Daniel, 2003).
Metabolism
Interactions involving drug metabolism are being increasingly well characterised. Induction of enzymes involved in drug metabolism results in reduced plasma concentrations of drugs that are substrates for the enzyme, and therefore their effectiveness is decreased. For example, enzyme induction by carbamazepine decreases the effectiveness of tricyclic antidepressants and antipsychotics. However, enzyme induction does not usually cause clinically hazardous interactions. Most significant drug interactions involve inhibition of enzyme systems, which increases plasma concentrations of the drugs involved, in turn leading to an increased risk of toxic effects.
The most important enzymes involved in drug interactions are members of the cytochrome P450 (CYP) system that are responsible for many of the phase 1 biotransformations of drugs. These metabolic transformations, such as oxidation, reduction and hydrolysis, produce a molecule that is suitable for conjugation. The potential for interactions involving uridine diphosphate glucurono-syltransferases (UGTs), responsible for phase 2 conjugation reactions, is now recognised. These reactions involve formation of a covalent bond between the drug and an endogenous substrate such as glucuronide, enabling the compound to be eliminated from the body usually by the kidney or in the bile.
Many psychotropic drugs have a high affinity for one or more of the enzymes in the CYP or UGT systems, which play a major role in their metabolism. Induction and inhibition of the activity of drug-metabolising enzymes, and the potential to precipitate hazardous drug interactions, are considered below, in the section Interactions involving drug-metabolising enzymes.
Excretion
Most clinically significant drug interactions involving excretion relate to the kidneys. The most important of these in psychiatric practice are interactions with lithium. Lithium is filtered by the kidney and reabsorbed by the proximal renal tubule in parallel with sodium. A sustained increase in urinary sodium excretion such as that produced by thiazide diuretics promotes a compensatory reabsorption of sodium by the proximal renal tubule. Lithium reabsorption is similarly enhanced, and because it has a narrow therapeutic index this can increase the plasma lithium concentration to potentially toxic levels.
P-glycoprotein
A further mechanism underlying pharmacokinetic drug interactions has recently been characterised. This involves a specific cell membrane transport protein known as P-glycoprotein (P-gp). The mechanism does not fit neatly into the conventional classification of pharmacokinetic interactions, as P-glycoprotein is involved in drug absorption, distribution and excretion. Drug interactions involving P-glycoprotein are considered in greater detail below.
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Cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes
A system to standardise the nomenclature of the CYP system was adopted in 1996 (Nelson et al, 1996). The three characters that follow the CYP abbreviation (for example in CYP2A6) represent the family, subfamily and individual enzyme, respectively. Families of enzymes share more than 40% homology in their gene sequences (in this example the family is represented by the number 2). Subfamilies share more than 55% homology in their gene sequences (in this example represented by the letter A).
Eleven CYP enzymes are responsible for metabolising the majority of pharmacological agents. Those of importance in the metabolism of psychotropic drugs are CYP1A2, CYP2C9, CYP2C19, CYP2D6 and CYP3A4, the last being responsible for the metabolism of more than 90% of psychotropic drugs that undergo hepatic biotransformation. Some key features of CYP enzymes are outlined in Box 2
.
Box 2 Cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes: key points
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Metabolisers
Genetic variability plays a major part in the activity of the CYP system and produces differences in the amount or activity of a particular enzyme. Pharmacogenetic polymorphism exists when a variant of a CYP gene generates an enzyme with substantially different activity, and it is present in more than 1% of the population (Meyer, 1991). Such polymorphism is clinically important as it can result in drug toxicity or ineffectiveness when drugs are given in standard doses. The CYP enzymes that demonstrate pharmacogenetic polymorphism include CYP2C9, CYP2C19 and CYP2D6 (Rogers et al, 2002). In clinical practice, the polymorphism produces distinct phenotypes, described as poor metabolisers, extensive metabolisers (the most common type) and ultra-rapid metabolisers.
Poor metabolisers
People who have dysfunctional or inactive CYP enzymes are phenotypically poor metabolisers. The metabolism and elimination of drugs that are substrates for the deficient enzymes are decreased and the likelihood of drug toxicity is increased. By contrast, some compounds are prescribed as pro-drugs (an inactive molecule that is converted to the active substance in the body). Since the therapeutic effect of such a drug depends on its conversion to an active metabolite, in poor metabolisers the drug may be less effective.
Extensive metabolisers
These people are most common in the general population and have normal CYP enzyme activity. They show the predicted responses to therapeutic doses of medication.
Ultra-rapid metabolisers
Ultra-rapid metabolisers have higher than normal activity of CYP enzymes, owing to gene duplication (Norton, 2001). In these individuals, drugs that are substrates for these enzymes may have a markedly reduced or completely absent therapeutic effect. By contrast, the increased metabolism can lead to toxicity when a pro-drug is administered, as it is rapidly transformed into an active metabolite with toxic properties.
CYP enzyme induction and inhibition
CYP enzymes can be induced or inhibited by drugs or other biological substances, with a consequent change in their ability to metabolise drugs that are normally substrates for those enzymes. However, exposure to an enzyme inducer or inhibitor does not always result in altered responses to co-prescribed drugs that are potentially subject to interactions. The probability of a clinically important interaction with co-prescribed drugs is unpredictable in individuals. For example, an enzyme inhibitor is more likely to have a greater effect if the person is an ultra-rapid metaboliser and will have little effect in someone who is already a poor metaboliser. Many drugs are metabolised by several CYP enzymes, so the probability of an interaction will depend on the enzyme(s) affected by the inducer or inhibitor and the availability of an effective alternative route of metabolism in that individual.
Induction
CYP1A2 and CYP3A4 enzymes are capable of being induced, resulting in increased quantities of enzyme as well as increased enzyme activity. Any drug that is a substrate of that enzyme will be more rapidly metabolised and this may result in reduced efficacy. As with ultra-rapid metabolisers, a pro-drug may be activated sufficiently rapidly to produce toxic levels of the active derivative. The onset and offset of enzyme induction take place gradually, usually over 710 days, and both the rate and extent can be difficult to predict (Cupp & Tracy, 1997). The slow onset is due to the time taken for the inducing agent to accumulate and the time needed to synthesise the new enzyme. The slow offset depends on the elimination of the inducing agent and the decay of the increased enzyme levels.
Inducers of the CYP system are less numerous than inhibitors. The most important are inducers of CYP3A4 and include carbamazepine, phenobarbital, phenytoin, rifampicin and St Johns wort (Hypericum perforatum). An example of an interaction in psychiatric practice is the reduced efficacy of haloperidol when carbamazepine is started, resulting from induction of CYP3A4.
Inhibition
Inhibition of CYP enzymes is the most common mechanism that produces serious and potentially life-threatening drug interactions (Johnson et al, 1999). Most enzyme inhibitors act specifically on individual CYP enzymes, so a drug inhibiting CYP2A6 may have no effect on CYP2C19.
Inhibition is usually due to a competitive action at the enzymes binding site. Therefore, in contrast to enzyme induction, the onset and offset of inhibition are dependent on the plasma level (and therefore the plasma half-life) of the inhibiting drug. Thus, drugs with a short half-life such as cimetidine will cause rapid inhibition, but the effects will be short-lived after it has been stopped. Important inhibitors of CYP that are involved in psychotropic drug interactions are listed in Table 2
. An example of this type of interaction is the increased risk of serious skin reactions with lamotrigine when it is co-prescribed with sodium valproate, resulting from inhibition of CYP3A4.
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View this table: [in a new window] | Table 2 Examples of CYP enzyme inhibitors |
Uridine diphosphate glucuronosyltransferases
Uridine diphosphate glucuronosyltransferases (UGTs) have received less attention than the CYP enzymes. They are responsible for metabolism of many anxiolytics, antidepressants, mood stabilisers and antipsychotics. Psychotropic inhibitors and inducers of UGTs are shown in Table 3
. Inhibition of the metabolism of carbamazepine by valproic acid in part results from an effect on UGTs. Amitriptyline and clomipramine decrease the metabolism of morphine and may contribute to opioid toxicity. The psychopharmacological significance of this type of interaction is not well understood (Kiang et al, 2005).
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View this table: [in a new window] | Table 3 Inducers and inhibitors of uridine diphosphate glucuronosyltransferases (UGTs) and P-glycoprotein |
Intestinal P-glycoprotein reduces effective drug absorption by actively transporting drugs back into the intestinal lumen. P-glycoprotein in the liver and kidneys promotes excretion of drugs from the blood stream into the bile and urine, respectively. In addition, P-glycoprotein is present at the bloodbrain barrier, where it reduces drug access to the CNS.
Like CYP enzymes, P-glycoprotein can be induced and inhibited by other drugs (Table 3
), which creates the potential for drug interactions (Kim, 2002). This is best illustrated by loperamide, an opioid derivative that normally does not cause central effects, owing to its exclusion at the bloodbrain barrier. However, if it is co-administered with quinidine, an inhibitor of P-glycoprotein, it causes CNS side-effects. In animal models, the CNS concentrations of certain drugs increase by 10- to 100-fold when P-glycoprotein is inhibited (Lin & Yamazaki, 2003). The role of P-glycoprotein in mediating drug interactions with psychotropic drugs is only starting to be unravelled (Carson et al, 2002).
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Effects on the CNS
Profound oversedation
Severe sedation due to the additive effect (summation) of drugs with sedating properties is a particular problem in elderly and frail people, and it can lead to falls and injuries (especially fractures of the femoral neck). Excessively drowsy patients are also at increased risk of venous thromboembolism and, if confined to bed, of hypostatic pneumonia. In people who drive, increased sedation due to drug interactions carries a correspondingly increased risk of road traffic accidents. It is the responsibility of the individual not to drive if their ability to do so safely is impaired by drugs, whether prescribed or not. Driving when reactions are impaired by drugs may lead to prosecution.
Profound and prolonged sedation can be brought about by inhibition of CYP3A4 enzymes that are involved in the metabolism of anxiolytics and sedatives. This occurs when one of the protease-inhibiting antiviral compounds amprenavir, indinavir and ritonavir are co-administered with any of the following: alprazolam, clorazepate, diazepam, flurazepam and zolpidem. In each of these cases, the inhibition of metabolism causes high plasma levels of the anti-anxiety and hypnotic substances.
Serotonin syndrome and related CNS toxicity
Central nervous system toxicity refers to a wide range of drug-induced toxic effects, including excitation and restlessness; tremor, rigidity and myoclonus; pyrexia with sweating and flushing; fluctuating vital signs; and delirium. These can progress to stupor, coma and, at worst, death.
The reactions include so-called serotonin syndrome, in which the toxicity is thought to be due to an increased effect of biogenic amines, particularly serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT). Toxicity can also result from the combined use of drugs that increase monoamine neurotransmission. Examples are the toxicity resulting from the concomitant prescribing of monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) with SSRIs, tricyclic and related anti-depressants, tryptophan or St Johns wort. It can also occur when any of these drugs is co-prescribed with:
Convulsive seizures
Seizures may result from the additive effects of two or more drugs that lower the convulsive threshold, as occurs for example when fluvoxamine or maprotiline are prescribed for patients taking clozapine. They may also result from inhibition of metabolism of a drug with epileptogenic properties. For instance, when erythromycin is prescribed for someone receiving clozapine, the antibiotic inhibits CYP3A4, thereby decreasing the metabolism and increasing the plasma concentration of the antipsychotic. This increases the risk of seizures. Alternatively, seizures may occur in people with epilepsy as a result of decreased plasma concentration of an anti-epileptic owing to enzyme induction. For instance, St Johns wort can increase the metabolism, and thus decrease the plasma concentration, of carbamazepine and phenytoin, resulting in inadequate control of the epilepsy.
Effects on the cardiovascular system
Hypotension
Although it is often considered a minor unwanted effect of psychotropic drugs, hypotension can be hazardous, especially in elderly people. As with oversedation, the drop in blood pressure can cause falls and injuries. Rarely, it can lead to cerebral ischaemia and stroke, an organic confusional state or myocardial ischaemia (which can precipitate a myocardial infarct).
Hypotension is a well-recognised anti-adrenergic effect of many pharmacotherapeutic agents. It is more liable to occur (as a result of summation) with combinations of drugs that have hypotensive effects, as when MAOIs are co-prescribed with drugs such as
In the case of nefopam, the fall in blood pressure is possibly greater because inhibition of its metabolism leads to increased plasma levels of the analgesic.
Hypertension
Hypertension is a serious unwanted effect of psychotropic medication. It is best known in relation to MAOIs notably in the cheese reaction. Inhibition of monoamine oxidase in the intestinal tract and liver results in increased plasma levels of amines (especially tyramine) that are derived from certain foods. The MAOIs also inhibit presynaptic mitochondrial monoamine oxidase (which is their therapeutic mode of action), with a consequent increase in the concentration of noradrenaline in the presynaptic vesicles and synaptic cleft. As a result of these actions, MAOIs taken in conjunction with the following drugs may result in hypertension:
The reaction has also been reported as a result of the co-prescribing of SSRIs and selegiline (which is an MAO-B inhibitor). The most serious consequences of hypertensive crises are intracerebral bleeding, subarachnoid haemorrhage, coma and death.
Ventricular arrhythmias
Of the various cardiac effects of psychotropic drugs, arrhythmias are the most important. Co-prescribing more than one drug that lengthens the QT interval on the electrocardiogram (ECG) is potentially dangerous. The same risk exists when a drug that increases the QT interval is co-administered with a compound that inhibits its metabolism. The risk is higher in people who have the risk factors shown in Box 3
. Prolongation of the QT interval increases the period of vulnerability of the myocardium during which ventricular arrhythmias particularly the irregular, broad, complex ventricular tachycardia known as torsade de pointes (twisting of the points) may be precipitated by ventricular premature beats.
Box 3 Risk factors for prolonged QT interval
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Prolongation of the QT interval is determined by several factors, especially blockade of the rapid component of the delayed rectifier potassium current (IKr) responsible for repolarisation of cardiac Purkinje cells and myocardial cells in the later phase of the cardiac action potential (OBrien & Oyebode, 2003). Many drugs, including certain antipsychotics and antidepressants, bind to this potassium channel and thereby decrease the outward movement of potassium, which is responsible for ventricular repolarisation. Some antipsychotics especially droperidol, pimozide, sertindole and thioridazine have a greater capacity than others to cause IKr blockade (Glassman & Bigger, 2001; Taylor, 2003). Some of these drugs also block other ion channels, thus adding to the complexity of their electrophysiological effects. If these compounds are prescribed for people who already have prolonged repolarisation, such as is produced by many anti-arrhythmic drugs, they increase the risk of ventricular arrhythmias.
Other serious effects
Interactions can increase the risk of serious side-effects of co-administered substances. Examples are an increased risk of:
A decreased therapeutic effect caused by drug interactions can occur in various areas of drug treatment. St Johns wort can lead to reduced plasma concentrations of various antibacterial, antiviral, anticoagulant and immunosuppressive drugs, and theophylline, which in turn can decrease their efficacy.
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Preventive measures include avoidance of unnecessary or unthoughtful polypharmacy, an understanding of the predictors of severe interactions (for example, older age, impaired hepatic and renal function, and multiple substance misuse), better education of prescribers and pharmacists about known and potential interactions, and improved drug safety monitoring directed towards the discovery of new interactions.
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MCQ answers
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