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Drug Interactions between Lotronex and miconazole

This report displays the potential drug interactions for the following 2 drugs:

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Interactions between your drugs

Moderate

miconazole alosetron

Applies to: miconazole and Lotronex (alosetron)

MONITOR: Coadministration with potent inhibitors of CYP450 3A4 may increase the plasma concentrations of alosetron, which has been shown in vitro to be partially metabolized by the isoenzyme. In 38 healthy female subjects, pretreatment with ketoconazole (200 mg twice a day for 7 days) increased the area under the plasma concentration-time curve (AUC) of alosetron (1 mg single oral dose) by 29% compared to administration of alosetron alone. Concomitant administration of alosetron with other CYP450 3A4 inhibitors has not been evaluated.

MANAGEMENT: Because alosetron is associated with potentially serious and life-threatening, dose-related gastrointestinal adverse effects, caution is advised during concomitant use with potent CYP450 3A4 inhibitors such as itraconazole, ketoconazole, voriconazole, nefazodone, delavirdine, protease inhibitors, and ketolide and certain macrolide antibiotics. Patients should be advised to immediately discontinue alosetron and notify their physician if they experience constipation or signs and symptoms of ischemic colitis such as rectal bleeding, bloody diarrhea, and new or worsening abdominal pain. Alosetron should not be resumed if ischemic colitis is diagnosed. Ischemic colitis and other serious complications such as obstruction, perforation, impaction, and toxic megacolon have resulted in hospitalization, blood transfusion, surgery, and death.

References

  1. (2001) "Product Information. Lotronex (alosetron)." Glaxo Wellcome

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Drug and food interactions

No alcohol/food interactions were found. However, this does not necessarily mean no interactions exist. Always consult your healthcare provider.

Therapeutic duplication warnings

No warnings were found for your selected drugs.

Therapeutic duplication warnings are only returned when drugs within the same group exceed the recommended therapeutic duplication maximum.


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Drug Interaction Classification

These classifications are only a guideline. The relevance of a particular drug interaction to a specific individual is difficult to determine. Always consult your healthcare provider before starting or stopping any medication.
Major Highly clinically significant. Avoid combinations; the risk of the interaction outweighs the benefit.
Moderate Moderately clinically significant. Usually avoid combinations; use it only under special circumstances.
Minor Minimally clinically significant. Minimize risk; assess risk and consider an alternative drug, take steps to circumvent the interaction risk and/or institute a monitoring plan.
Unknown No interaction information available.

Further information

Always consult your healthcare provider to ensure the information displayed on this page applies to your personal circumstances.