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Drug Interactions between Panmycin and quinine

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

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Interactions between your drugs

Minor

tetracycline quiNINE

Applies to: Panmycin (tetracycline) and quinine

Some drugs that inhibit cytochrome P450 enzymes may increase the plasma concentration of quinine. Clinical monitoring of patient response and tolerance is recommended.

References

  1. Zhao XJ, Ishizaki T "A further interaction study of quinine with clinically important drugs by human liver microsomes: determinations of inhibition constant (K-i) and type of inhibition." Eur J Drug Metab Pharm 24 (1999): 272-8

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Drug and food interactions

Moderate

tetracycline food

Applies to: Panmycin (tetracycline)

ADJUST DOSING INTERVAL: Administration with food, particularly dairy products, significantly reduces tetracycline absorption. The calcium content of these foods forms nonabsorbable chelates with tetracycline.

MANAGEMENT: Tetracycline should be administered one hour before or two hours after meals.

References

  1. "Product Information. Achromycin (tetracycline)." Lederle Laboratories PROD (2001):
  2. "Product Information. Declomycin (demeclocycline)." Lederle Laboratories PROD (2001):

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Moderate

tetracycline food

Applies to: Panmycin (tetracycline)

GENERALLY AVOID: The bioavailability of oral tetracyclines and iron salts may be significantly decreased during concurrent administration. Therapeutic failure may result. The proposed mechanism is chelation of tetracyclines by the iron cation, forming an insoluble complex that is poorly absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract. In ten healthy volunteers, simultaneous oral administration of ferrous sulfate 200 mg and single doses of various tetracyclines (200 mg to 500 mg) resulted in reductions in the serum levels of methacycline and doxycycline by 80% to 90%, oxytetracycline by 50% to 60%, and tetracycline by 40% to 50%. In another study, 300 mg of ferrous sulfate reduced the absorption of tetracycline by 81% and that of minocycline by 77%. Conversely, the absorption of iron has been shown to be decreased by up to 78% in healthy subjects and up to 65% in patients with iron depletion when ferrous sulfate 250 mg was administered with tetracycline 500 mg. Available data suggest that administration of iron 3 hours before or 2 hours after a tetracycline largely prevents the interaction with most tetracyclines except doxycycline. Due to extensive enterohepatic cycling, iron binding may occur with doxycycline even when it is given parenterally. It has also been shown that when iron is administered up to 11 hours after doxycycline, serum concentrations of doxycycline may still be reduced by 20% to 45%.

MANAGEMENT: Coadministration of a tetracycline with any iron-containing product should be avoided if possible. Otherwise, patients should be advised to stagger the times of administration by at least three to four hours, although separating the doses may not prevent the interaction with doxycycline.

References

  1. Neuvonen PJ "Interactions with the absorption of tetracyclines." Drugs 11 (1976): 45-54
  2. Gothoni G, Neuvonen PJ, Mattila M, Hackman R "Iron-tetracycline interaction: effect of time interval between the drugs." Acta Med Scand 191 (1972): 409-11
  3. Venho VM, Salonen RO, Mattila MJ "Modification of the pharmacokinetics of doxycycline in man by ferrous sulphate or charcoal." Eur J Clin Pharmacol 14 (1978): 277-80
  4. "Product Information. Minocin (minocycline)." Lederle Laboratories PROD (2002):
  5. Campbell NR, Hasinoff BB "Iron supplements: a common cause of drug interactions." Br J Clin Pharmacol 31 (1991): 251-5
  6. Bateman FJ "Effects of tetracyclines." Br Med J 4 (1970): 802
  7. Neuvonen PJ, Gothoni G, Hackman R, Bjorksten K "Interference of iron with the absorption of tetracyclines in man." Br Med J 4 (1970): 532-4
  8. Greenberger NJ "Absorption of tetracyclines: interference by iron." Ann Intern Med 74 (1971): 792-3
  9. Neuvonen PJ, Penttila O "Effect of oral ferrous sulphate on the half-life of doxycycline in man." Eur J Clin Pharmacol 7 (1974): 361-3
  10. "Product Information. Seysara (sarecycline)." Allergan Inc (2018):
  11. "Product Information. Nuzyra (omadacycline)." Paratek Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (2018):
View all 11 references

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Minor

quiNINE food

Applies to: quinine

Coadministration with grapefruit juice does not appear to affect the pharmacokinetics of quinine in a clinically relevant manner. Although grapefruit juice is an inhibitor of CYP450 3A4 and quinine is metabolized by this pathway to its major metabolite, 3-hydroxyquinine, a study of ten healthy volunteers found no significant differences in quinine peak plasma concentration (Cmax), time to reach Cmax (Tmax), terminal elimination half-life, systemic exposure (AUC), or apparent oral clearance (Cl/F) when a single 600 mg oral dose of quinine sulfate was administered in combination with 200 mL of orange juice (control), half-strength grapefruit juice, and full-strength grapefruit juice twice daily for 6 days each, separated by a 2-week washout period. Relative to the control period, the apparent renal clearance of quinine was markedly increased by 81% during treatment with half-strength grapefruit juice. However, since renal clearance accounts for approximately 6% of the total clearance of quinine, this change would likely have minimal clinical impact. The lack of a significant interaction is probably due to the fact that grapefruit juice primarily inhibits intestinal rather than hepatic CYP450 3A4, and quinine is not known to undergo significant presystemic metabolism as evidenced by its relatively high oral bioavailability (76% to 88%). Nevertheless, excessive consumption of grapefruit juice and tonic water (which contains quinine) was suspected as the cause of torsade de pointes arrhythmia in a patient with a history of asymptomatic long QT syndrome. Treatment with magnesium sulfate and metoprolol had no effect, but the arrhythmia resolved spontaneously 48 hours after discontinuation of the drinks. Based on current data, moderate grapefruit juice consumption is probably safe for the majority of patients taking quinine.

References

  1. Ho PC, Chalcroft SC, Coville PF, Wanwimolruk S "Grapefruit juice has no effect on quinine pharmacokinetics." Eur J Clin Pharmacol 55 (1999): 393-8
  2. Hermans K, Stockman D, Van den Branden F "Grapefruit and tonic: a deadly combination in a patient with the long QT syndrome." Am J Med 114 (2003): 511-2
  3. "Product Information. Qualaquin (quinine)." AR Scientific Inc (2006):
  4. Zhang H, Coville PF, Walker RJ, Miners JO, Birkett DJ, Wanwimolruk S "Evidence for involvement of human CYP3A in the 3-hydroxylation of quinine." Br J Clin Pharmacol 43 (1997): 245-52
  5. Mirghani RA, Yasar U, Zheng T, et al. "Enzyme kinetics for the formation of 3-hydroxyquinine and three new metabolites of quinine in vitro; 3-hydroxylation by CYP3A4 is indeed the major metabolic pathway." Drug Metab Dispos 30 (2002): 1368-71
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.