Drug Interaction Report
3 potential interactions and/or warnings found for the following 2 drugs:
- quinine
- repotrectinib
Interactions between your drugs
quiNINE repotrectinib
Applies to: quinine, repotrectinib
Talk to your doctor before using quiNINE together with repotrectinib. Combining these medications may reduce the blood levels and effects of quiNINE. Contact your doctor if your symptoms worsen or your condition changes during treatment with these medications. Your doctor may be able to prescribe alternatives that do not interact, or you may need a dose adjustment or more frequent monitoring to safely use both medications. It is important to tell your doctor about all other medications you use, including vitamins and herbs. Do not stop using any medications without first talking to your doctor.
Drug and food interactions
repotrectinib food
Applies to: repotrectinib
Consumption of grapefruit, grapefruit juice, and supplements that contain grapefruit should be avoided during treatment with repotrectinib as they may increase the blood levels of repotrectinib. This may increase the risk and/or severity of side effects such as dizziness, tiredness, muscle pain, nausea, change in your sense of taste, feeling numbness or tingling in your arms or legs, constipation, trouble with balance, shortness of breath, problems with thinking such as forgetfulness or confusion and hallucinations, as well as more serious side effects such severe or life-threatening inflammation of the lungs and liver injury. Talk to your doctor if you have any questions or concerns. Your doctor may be able to provide alternatives that do not interact. It is important to tell your doctor about all other medications you use, including vitamins and herbs. Do not stop using any medications without first talking to your doctor.
quiNINE food
Applies to: quinine
Information for this minor interaction is available on the professional version.
Therapeutic duplication warnings
No duplication 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.
Drug Interaction Classification
Highly clinically significant. Avoid combinations; the risk of the interaction outweighs the benefit. | |
Moderately clinically significant. Usually avoid combinations; use it only under special circumstances. | |
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. | |
No interaction information available. |
See also:
Plaquenil
Plaquenil is used to treat or prevent malaria and to treat the symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis ...
Vibramycin
Vibramycin is used for acne, actinomycosis, amebiasis, anthrax, anthrax prophylaxis, bacterial ...
Ozempic
Learn about Ozempic (semaglutide) for type 2 diabetes treatment, weight management, cardiovascular ...
Cleocin
Cleocin (clindamycin) is used to treat serious bacterial infections. Includes Cleocin side effects ...
Monodox
Monodox is used for acne, actinomycosis, amebiasis, anthrax, anthrax prophylaxis, bacterial ...
Malarone
Malarone (atovaquone and proguanil) is an antiprotozoal and antimalarial and is used to treat or ...
Mepron
Mepron is used for babesiosis, malaria, pneumocystis pneumonia, pneumocystis pneumonia prophylaxis ...
Oracea
Oracea is used to treat inflammation associated with rosacea in adults. Learn about side effects ...
Coartem
Coartem is used to treat malaria. Learn about side effects, interactions and indications.
Learn more
Further information
Always consult your healthcare provider to ensure the information displayed on this page applies to your personal circumstances.
Check Interactions
To view an interaction report containing 4 (or more) medications, please sign in or create an account.
Save Interactions List
Sign in to your account to save this drug interaction list.