| Literature DB >> 33262433 |
Juan Macías1, Ana Pinilla2, Francisco A Lao-Dominguez3, Anaïs Corma2, Enrique Contreras-Macias3, Alejandro González-Serna2, Antonio Gutierrez-Pizarraya3, Marta Fernández-Fuertes2, Ramón Morillo-Verdugo3, Marta Trigo2, Luis M Real2, Juan A Pineda2.
Abstract
The impact of drug-drug interactions (DDI) between ritonavir-boosted lopinavir (LPV-r) to treat patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and commonly used drugs in clinical practice is not well-known. Thus, we evaluated the rate and severity of DDI between LPV-r for COVID-19 treatment and concomitant medications. This was a cross-sectional study including all individuals diagnosed of SARS-CoV-2 infection treated with LPV-r and attended at a single center in Southern Spain (March 1st to April 30th, 2020). The frequency [95% confidence interval (95% CI)] of potential and major DDI were calculated. Overall, 469 patients were diagnosed of COVID-19, 125 (27%) of them were prescribed LPV-r. LPV-r had potential DDI with concomitant medications in 97 (78%, 95% CI 69-85%) patients, and in 33 (26%, 95% CI 19-35%) individuals showed major DDI. Twelve (36%) patients with major DDI and 14 (15%) individuals without major DDI died (p = 0.010). After adjustment, only the Charlson index was independently associated with death [adjusted OR (95% CI) for Charlson index ≥ 5: 85 (10-731), p < 0.001]. LPV-r was discontinued due to side effects in 31 (25%) patients. Management by the Infectious Diseases Unit was associated with a lower likelihood of major DDI [adjusted odds ratio (95% CI): 0.14 (0.04-0.53), p = 0.003). In conclusion, a high frequency of DDI between LPV-r for treating COVID-19 and concomitant medications was found, including major DDI. Patients with major DDI showed worse outcomes, but this association was explained by the older age and comorbidities. Patients managed by the Infectious Diseases Unit had lower risk of major DDI.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33262433 PMCID: PMC7708981 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-78029-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Characteristics of the patients (n = 125).
| Characteristic | Value |
|---|---|
| Median (Q1–Q3) age, years | 63 (53–76) |
| Male sex, n (%) | 60 (48) |
| Health care professional, n (%) | 14 (11) |
| Nursing home residency, n (%) | 4 (3.2) |
| Arterial hypertension | 25 (20) |
| Type 2 diabetes mellitus | 11 (8.8) |
| Cardiovascular disease | 18 (14) |
| Chronic renal disease | 4 (3.2) |
| Chronic lung disease | 6 (4.8) |
| Cirrhosis | 2 (1.6) |
| Dementia | 14 (11) |
| Cancer | 7 (5.6) |
| Drug-related immunosuppression | 3 (2.4) |
| HIV infection | 1 (0.8) |
| 0 | 15 (12) |
| 1–2 | 47 (38) |
| 3–4 | 37 (30) |
| ≥ 5 | 26 (21) |
| Extrapulmonary infection | 15 (12) |
| Pneumonia | 96 (77) |
| Severe pneumonia | 12 (9.6) |
| Acute severe respiratory distress syndrome | 2 (1.6) |
| PCR | 122 (98) |
| Serology | 3 (2.4) |
aMain comorbidity per patient: for each patient a single comorbidity was selected, i.e. the condition considered most severe.
Figure 1(A) Proportion of patients with potential drug-drug interactions by concomitant medication group (N = 125). GI drugs: gastrointestinal drugs included ondansetron, metoclopramide and loperamide. (B) Proportion of patients with major drug-drug interactions by concomitant medication (N = 125). Other drugs: ivabradine, ticagrelor, domperidone, quetiapine.
Factors associated with death among patients with COVID-19 receiving lopinavir-ritonavir (n = 125).
| Characteristic | N | Deaths | Unadjusted OR (95% CI) | Univariate p value | Adjusted OR (95% CI) | Multivariate p value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| < 0.001 | – | |||||
| < 65 | 64 | 3 (4.7) | ||||
| ≥ 65 | 61 | 23 (38) | 12 (3.5–44) | |||
| 0.819 | 0.980 | |||||
| Men | 60 | 13 (22) | 1.1 (0.5–2.6) | 1.0 (0.4–2.9) | ||
| Women | 65 | 13 (20) | ||||
| < 0.001 | < 0.001 | |||||
| 0–2 | 62 | 1 (1.6) | Reference | |||
| 3–4 | 37 | 9 (24) | 19.6 (2.4–162) | 18 (2.2–151) | 0.008 | |
| ≥ 5 | 26 | 16 (62) | 98 (11–820) | 85 (10–731) | < 0.001 | |
| 0.010 | 0.383 | |||||
| Not major | 92 | 14 (15) | 3.2 (1.3–7.9) | |||
| Major | 33 | 12 (36) | 1.6 (0.6–4.8) | |||
| 0.584 | - | |||||
| Infectious diseases unit | 54 | 10 (19) | ||||
| Other units | 71 | 16 (23) | 1.3 (0.5–3.1) | |||
aAge was not included in the multivariate analysis because the Charlson index contains this variable.