Drug Interaction Report
2 potential interactions and/or warnings found for the following 2 drugs:
- rizatriptan
- V-Gan-25 (promethazine)
Interactions between your drugs
promethazine rizatriptan
Applies to: V-Gan-25 (promethazine), rizatriptan
Coadministration with rizatriptan may alter the plasma concentrations of drugs that are primarily metabolized by CYP450 2D6. Rizatriptan has been shown to be a competitive inhibitor of CYP450 2D6 in vitro, but only at high, clinically irrelevant concentrations and a clinically significant inhibitory effect on CYP450 2D6 has not been demonstrated in clinical drug interaction studies. Based on these observations, rizatriptan may be administered with CYP450 2D6 substrates without the need for increased clinical monitoring
References (5)
- (2025) "Product Information. Symbravo (meloxicam-rizatriptan)." Axsome Therapeutics, Inc.
- (2020) "Product Information. Rizatriptan Benzoate (rizatriptan)." Exelan Pharmaceuticals Inc
- (2025) "Product Information. Rizatriptan (rizatriptan)." Organon Pharma (UK) Ltd
- (2018) "Product Information. Rizatriptan (rizatriptan)." Accel Pharma Inc
- (2024) "Product Information. Rizatriptan ODT (WGR) (rizatriptan)." GM Pharma International Pty Ltd
Drug and food/lifestyle interactions
promethazine food/lifestyle
Applies to: V-Gan-25 (promethazine)
GENERALLY AVOID: Concurrent use of ethanol and phenothiazines may result in additive CNS depression and psychomotor impairment. Also, ethanol may precipitate dystonic reactions in patients who are taking phenothiazines. The two drugs probably act on different sites in the brain, although the exact mechanism of the interaction is not known.
MANAGEMENT: Patients should be advised to avoid alcohol during phenothiazine therapy.
References (2)
- Lutz EG (1976) "Neuroleptic-induced akathisia and dystonia triggered by alcohol." JAMA, 236, p. 2422-3
- Freed E (1981) "Alcohol-triggered-neuroleptic-induced tremor, rigidity and dystonia." Med J Aust, 2, p. 44-5
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. |
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Further information
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