Review Article
Pharmacological Interactions in Patients with Epileptic Crisis Hospitalized in a Public Institution
Carolina Soledad Montiel, María Ignacia Troche, Lupe Marin, Gladys Lugo de Ortellado, Lourdes Samaniego, Gustavo H Marin* and Gladys Mabel Maidana
Corresponding Author: Gustavo H Marin, Department of Pharmacology, Faculty of Medicine, National University of La Plata, Argentina
Received: December 12, 2019; Revised: May 24, 2020; Accepted: December 26, 2019
Citation: Montiel CS, Troche MI, Marin GH, de Ortellado GL, Samaniego L, et al. (2020) Pharmacological Interactions in Patients with Epileptic Crisis Hospitalized in a Public Institution. Int J Surg Invasive Procedures, 3(1): 130-137.
Copyrights: ©2020 Montiel CS, Troche MI, Marin GH, de Ortellado GL, Samaniego L, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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Objective: To evaluate the potential pharmacological interactions in a group of adult hospitalized patients who, due to an epileptic crisis, the present study was carried out.

Methodology: Descriptive-analytical study, collecting data from hospitalized patients' medical records during the investigation period.

Results: 937 patients were enrolled in the study, 143 different drug interactions were detected in 35 patients, which involved 46 medicines administered. The interactions were classified according to their theoretical relevance in serious (18.88%), significant (51.04%) and minor (30.07%). 48.57% of patients presented drug interactions with nutrients.

Conclusion: The intervention of a multidisciplinary team is necessary for the management of these patients, which includes nutritionists specially trained in aspects of pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, in order to minimize the incidence of pharmacological interactions.

 

Keywords: Pharmacological interactions, Nutrients, Hospitalization

INTRODUCTION

The term drug interactions (DI) refer to a clinical situation when the action of a drug is altered by the presence of another drug or food, with neutral, beneficial or malefic consequences [1]. The risk of its occurrence and severity is due to factors related to the patient, the medicines themselves and the medical prescription [2]; they can ends either in a therapeutic failure or in the appearance of adverse effects. There are some illnesses that due to their characteristics or type of medications used have a higher risk of interactions. This is the case of patients diagnosed with epilepsy. Epilepsy is one of the most common neurological diseases, with more than 50 million people affected around the world and of which about 80% come from developing regions. It is estimated that about 5 million people suffer from the disease in Latin America and the Caribbean countries [3]. Epilepsy is characterized by recurrent seizures, which are brief episodes of involuntary movements that can affect a part of the body (partial seizures) or its entirety (generalized seizures) and are some cases accompanied by loss of consciousness. Pharmacological treatment for epilepsy manages to control epileptic seizures in up to 70% of patients, some of them severe that need hospital admission [3].

The objective of this work is to identify the possible drug interactions in hospitalized patients due to epileptic seizures; in order to optimize their health care.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Type of study

Descriptive-analytical, retrospective study.

Institution

The present work was developed in a Public Hospital Specialized in Burns, located in the city of Asunción, Republic of Paraguay.

Population

Adult patients >18 years hospitalized for burn injuries for more than 48 h as a result of epileptic seizures, who entered the boarding school unit in the period from January 2015 to December 2017.

Data collection instrument

Review of medical records of hospitalized patients. Pharmaceutical records of dispense record.

Instrument for identification and classification of interactions: Medscape Interaction Checker (WebMD, LLC).

Variables

Date of admission, date of discharge, age, sex, origin, number, type, dose of medicines dispensed and type of administration, type of food and nutritional supplements administered and type of intake.

 

 

STATISTICAL ANALYSIS

The statistical analysis was performed with the EPI INFO statistical software, each variable was coded for the programme management, with its description and its categories. This programme allows expressing the results in frequency and percentage of each study variable.

ETHICAL ASPECTS

This work was carried out according to international standards for biomedical research in human beings proposed by the Council of International Organizations of Medical Sciences (CIOMS) where the confidentiality of data obtained from patient records is respected, for this; the project was presented to the Research Ethics Committee of the Faculty of Chemical Sciences, National University of Asuncion (UNA) Paraguay Republic and each patient was asked to sign an informed consent for this purpose.

RESULTS

A total of 937 adult patients entered the Burns boarding room unit during the study period, 35 patients of whom suffered burns due to epileptic seizures, which represent 3.73% of all admissions. 62.86% of the patients belong to the female sex. The age range is between 18 to 74 years, with an average of 40 years and a standard deviation of 16.5. 65.71% of patients come from rural areas (Table 1).

The administration of registered and dispensed medicines allowed us to identify that the patients enrolled in the study received between 5 and 28 medicines on the whole day of hospitalization (29 ± 8), with an average of 12 medicines per patient (Figure 1).

It was found that patients with ages over 60 years have a tendency to receive a greater quantity of medicines (Figure 2), which is directly related to the risk of possible pharmacological interactions in patients with that age range.

Of a total of 46 medicines that were detected in the interactions, the most prescribed correspond to group N (Drugs that act on the Nervous System) according to ATC. Phenytoin was the most prescribed and administered medicines, with a frequency of 71.43% of the total patients. Then they are followed by those of group J, anti-infective drugs for systemic use, in which ciprofloxacin corresponds to the most administered medicines within the group, with a frequency of 45.71% (Table 2 and Figure 3).

The patients included in this study presented a total of 143 pharmacological interactions, which were classified according to their theoretical relevance in serious; which represent 18.88% of the interactions; 51.04% significant and 30.07% lower (Figure 4). The lowest number of potential interactions presented by the patients was 4 and the highest was 44 interactions (Tables 3-5).

48.57% of the patients in the study had drug-nutrient type interactions (Table 6), corresponding to 3.50% of the total drug interactions. The most frequent potential interaction was that of Phenytoin with Calcium (8.39%).

DISCUSSION

The prevalence of interactions observed in the present study was directly proportional to the increase in the age of the patients, suggesting that older patients are more vulnerable due of their greater number of prescribed drugs, the complexity in treatment and a reduction in renal function [2,4].

Pharmacological interactions themselves are a cause of hospital admission, but in practice this is relatively unusual. In daily practice only some of them have relevant clinical consequences that warrant hospitalization. Although it is very difficult to know the real frequency and clinical relevance of the interactions, it is currently known that many of them do not pose a risk to the patient and those that are clinically significant only occur in a small proportion of patients.

In this work 143 interactions in 937 patients were detected, they are significantly smaller than the data provided from other published studies. Several authors found 329 theoretical interactions in 412 patients, although it should be noted that these data cannot be directly compared with our study, due to the methodological difference, population and design, which contributes considerably for the variation of the observed frequencies [4].

The interactions found in our work were classified into 3 levels: serious, significant and minor; the “significant” ones were the most prevalent (51.04%), a fact that matches with other observations made by various authors [2].

Co-morbidities and the amount of drugs co-administered can increase the incidence of drug-related adverse effects and therefore, increase the risk of injury. For example, drowsiness is a common side effect of antiepileptic drugs and could be enhanced due to their association with hypnotic drugs or with psychiatric problems [5].

Regarding the number of medicines administered and their indication, it was observed that there was a higher frequency of medicines with action on the nervous system, being phenytoin (anti-epileptic) the most administered drug (54.34%) and therefore the medicine most involved in possible interactions. In addition, carbamazepine and clonazepam, also used to control epileptic seizures, were found within the group.

Some of the anti-epileptics bind extensively to plasma proteins. Only the unbound (free) fraction of the drug is able to pass through membranes and have pharmacological activity, hence many drug-drug interactions may occur as a result of competition for protein binding sites as observed in the case of phenytoin-ibuprofen or phenytoin-diazepam in our results.

From these data it is inferred that it might be appropriate to monitor the levels of the free fraction of drugs only in those cases where drug interactions are important and have sufficient risk to the health of patients [6].

Although monitoring would not be useful in all cases, it should be performed for drugs with the greatest potential to produce interactions are those with a narrow therapeutic index, which require precise control of plasma concentrations, those with dose-response curves with a broad slope, saturable metabolism or in case there is an indication of chronic treatment [7].

In the second place in the ranking of the interactions, we identified drugs from therapeutic group called “anti-infective for systemic use” (Group J), in 34.78% interaction of the cases, being ciprofloxacin the most prevalent in the group.

Microbial use was associated with age, co-morbidities and toxic habits such as smoking and alcoholism of patients [8].

It was detected that 48.57% of the patients under study presented an interaction of the drug-nutrient type. The most frequent case of this type was that phenytoin with calcium (8.39%), an essential component of nutritional supplements. This fact is clinically relevant, since anticonvulsants have a higher risk of producing bone demineralization and fracture on pathological bone, events that are facilitated by risk factors such as vitamin D deficiency and hypocalcaemia [9].

To assess the safety of concomitant use of drugs, the different characteristics of the interaction must be studied.

In this context, the presence of the clinical pharmacist in each of the hospital units is essential to be able to monitor the pharmacotherapeutic treatment and taking into account other variables inherent to the patient, which go unnoticed by other disciplines and professions; in order to minimize the incidence of preventable drug interactions [2].

CONCLUSION

The present study 48.57% of hospitalized patients with epilepsy, a drug-nutrient or drug interactions were detected. The drugs involved belong predominantly to the group acting on the nervous system, being phenytoin the medicine that presented the greatest interaction risk. The presence of a clinical pharmacist could help to prevent and reduce the incidence of drug interactions, optimizing health care practice.

1.       Santibañez C, Roque J, Morales G, Corrales R. (2014) Characteristics of drug interactions in a pediatric intensive care unit. Chilean Journal of Pediatrics 85.

2.       Caribe RA, Chaves GR, Pocognoni JD, Souza IA (2013) Potential drug interactions in patients with sepsis admitted to the intensive care unit. Hosp Pharm 37.

3.       Orozco J, Quintero J, Marin Medina D, Castaño J, Hernández P, et al. (2016) Clinical and sociodemographic profile of adult epilepsy from a reference center in Colombia. Science Direct 31.

4.       López Vazquez P, Rodríguez Moreno C, Durán Parrondo C, Tato Herrero F, Rodríguez López I, et al. (2005) Interactions between medications prescribed for discharge in an internal medicine service. Ann Intern Med 22.

5.       Asadi Pooya A, Nikseresht A, Yaghoubid E, Nei M (2012) Physical injuries in patients with epilepsy and their associated risk factors. Elsevier 21: 165-168.

6.       López González R (2016) Epilepsy, pharmacological treatment and its monitoring. Dome 30.

7.       Miquet RLM, Rodriguez GR, Llorente BN, Hernández CM, González RH (2015) Local infection of the burn and nutritional status. Cuban Magazine of Nutrition and Nutrition 25: 301-313.

8.       Vildoso Fernández M (2009) Nutritional effects of anticonvulsants. MedWave 9.

9.       Piñeiro Corrales G (2009) Drug-nutrient interactions in neurological pathologies. Hosp Nutr Suppl 2.