Prevalence of drug-drug interactions in sarcoma patients: key role of the pharmacist integration for toxicity risk management.
Audrey BellesoeurIthar GataaAnne JouinotSarah El MershatiAnne-Catherine PikettyCamille TlemsaniDavid BalakirouchenaneAnthia MonribotMichel VidalRui BatistaSixtine de PercinClémentine VillemineyJérôme AlexandreFrançois GoldwasserBenoit BlanchetPascaline Boudou-RouquetteAudrey Thomas-SchoemannPublished in: Cancer chemotherapy and pharmacology (2021)
One hundred and twenty-two soft-tissue and 80 bone sarcoma patients (103 males, median age 50 years,) were included before CT (86%) or TKI (14%). The median number of medications was 3; 34 patients (22% of patients with medication reconciliation) reported complementary medicine use. 37 potential DDI classified as major, were identified (12% of the 243 pre-therapeutic assessments). In multivariate analysis, TKI (p < 0.0001), proton pump inhibitor (p = 0.026) and antidepressant (p < 0.001) were identified as risk factors of DDI (p < 0.02). Only marital status (p = 0.003) was associated with complementary medicine use. A pharmacist performed 157 medication reconciliations and made 71 interventions among 59 patients (37%). In multivariate analysis, factors associated with pharmacist intervention were: complementary medicines (p = 0.004), drugs number (p = 0.005) and treatment with TKI (p = 0.0002) CONCLUSIONS: Clinical interventions on DDI are more frequently required among sarcoma patients treated with TKI than CT. Multidisciplinary risk assessment including a medication reconciliation by a pharmacist could be crucial to prevent DDI with TKI.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- risk factors
- risk assessment
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- tyrosine kinase
- healthcare
- advanced non small cell lung cancer
- prognostic factors
- randomized controlled trial
- soft tissue
- computed tomography
- emergency department
- body composition
- positron emission tomography
- image quality
- electronic health record
- replacement therapy
- pet ct