| Literature DB >> 32347140 |
Bridget Myers1, Vidhatha Reddy1, Stephanie Chan1, Quinn Thibodeaux1, Nicholas Brownstone1, John Koo1.
Abstract
Doxepin, a tricyclic antidepressant, is the most efficacious antipruritic available to dermatologists; however its use is often suboptimal because of significant interindividual variability in doxepin plasma levels and clinical response between patients taking the same dose. As result, the Food and Drug Administration approves a maximum dose of 300 mg of doxepin per day and a 10 mg per cc liquid doxepin concentrate. These allow patients to significantly increase or decrease their dose, due to either a lack of clinical efficacy or side effects at typical dermatologic doses (often 10-25 mg per day). This review initially discusses the unique advantages of doxepin in dermatology. Then, it explores internal and external reasons why doxepin plasma levels and clinical response vary so significantly between patients, including genetic polymorphisms, drug interactions, comorbidities, sex, and ethnicity. Blood level monitoring is introduced, a tool dermatologists can use to optimize doxepin dosing in patients responding subtherapeutically to typical dermatologic doses. Without blood level monitoring, patients initially unresponsive to treatment could be labeled treatment failures when in fact they may be cases of inadequate dosing. Blood level monitoring allows for safe dose adjustments in these individuals to maximize patients' chances of achieving therapeutic success with this agent.Entities:
Keywords: Dermatology; blood level monitoring; doxepin; pruritus; treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32347140 DOI: 10.1080/09546634.2020.1762841
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Dermatolog Treat ISSN: 0954-6634 Impact factor: 3.359