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Drug Interactions between butabarbital and Cancidas

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

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Interactions between your drugs

Moderate

butabarbital caspofungin

Applies to: butabarbital and Cancidas (caspofungin)

MONITOR: Coadministration with inducers or mixed inducer/inhibitors of certain metabolic pathways may produce clinically meaningful reductions in the plasma concentrations of caspofungin. This assumption is based on results from regression analyses of patient pharmacokinetic data derived from a small number of patients who were administered the drugs efavirenz, nelfinavir, nevirapine, phenytoin, rifampin, dexamethasone, or carbamazepine prior to and/or concurrently with caspofungin. There are no data from formal drug interaction studies to evaluate these regression analyses, and it is not known which metabolic pathway involved in caspofungin clearance may be inducible.

MANAGEMENT: Caspofungin product labeling recommends that during coadministration with efavirenz, nelfinavir, nevirapine, phenytoin, rifampin, dexamethasone or carbamazepine, an increase in the daily dosage to 70 mg (following the usual 70 mg loading dose) should be considered in patients who are not clinically responding. While data are lacking for other drugs that are known to induce hepatic enzymes, the possibility of a similar interaction should be considered.

References

  1. "Product Information. Cancidas (caspofungin)." Merck & Co., Inc PROD (2001):

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Drug and food interactions

Major

butabarbital food

Applies to: butabarbital

GENERALLY AVOID: Concurrent acute use of barbiturates and ethanol may result in additive CNS effects, including impaired coordination, sedation, and death. Tolerance of these agents may occur with chronic use. The mechanism is related to inhibition of microsomal enzymes acutely and induction of hepatic microsomal enzymes chronically.

MANAGEMENT: The combination of ethanol and barbiturates should be avoided.

References

  1. Gupta RC, Kofoed J "Toxological statistics for barbiturates, other sedatives, and tranquilizers in Ontario: a 10-year survey." Can Med Assoc J 94 (1966): 863-5
  2. Misra PS, Lefevre A, Ishii H, Rubin E, Lieber CS "Increase of ethanol, meprobamate and pentobarbital metabolism after chronic ethanol administration in man and in rats." Am J Med 51 (1971): 346-51
  3. Saario I, Linnoila M "Effect of subacute treatment with hypnotics, alone or in combination with alcohol, on psychomotor skills related to driving." Acta Pharmacol Toxicol (Copenh) 38 (1976): 382-92
  4. Stead AH, Moffat AC "Quantification of the interaction between barbiturates and alcohol and interpretation of fatal blood concentrations." Hum Toxicol 2 (1983): 5-14
  5. Seixas FA "Drug/alcohol interactions: avert potential dangers." Geriatrics 34 (1979): 89-102
View all 5 references

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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.