Literature DB >> 1601534

Lack of pharmacokinetic interaction as an equivalence problem.

V W Steinijans1, M Hartmann, R Huber, H W Radtke.   

Abstract

The demonstration that concomitant administration of drug B does not affect the pharmacokinetics of drug A can be adequately handled as an equivalence problem. Administration of drug A alone serves as reference and simultaneous administration of drugs A and B as test situation. The range of clinically acceptable variation in the pharmacokinetic characteristics of drug A defines the equivalence range. This will usually correspond to the bioequivalence range accepted for the comparison of different formulations of drug A. Equivalence, i.e. lack of pharmacokinetic interaction, is concluded if the 90%-confidence interval for the ratio (difference) of the expected medians for test and reference is entirely within the equivalence range. This decision procedure ensures that the consumer risk of incorrectly concluding "lack of interaction" is limited to 5%. Moreover, the producer risk of incorrectly concluding "interaction" can be controlled by appropriate sample sizes.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1601534

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Clin Pharmacol Ther Toxicol        ISSN: 0174-4879


  2 in total

1.  Improvement in the handling of drug-drug interactions.

Authors:  Uwe Fuhr
Journal:  Eur J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2008-01-03       Impact factor: 2.953

Review 2.  Clinically important drug interactions with anticoagulants. An update.

Authors:  S Harder; P Thürmann
Journal:  Clin Pharmacokinet       Date:  1996-06       Impact factor: 6.447

  2 in total

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