MO471: Adverse Drug Reactions and Drug–Drug Interaction in Chronic Kidney Disease With Tuberculosis
Divya Datta, Ravindra Prabhu, Nisha Abdul Khader, Shankar Prasad Nagaraju, Indu Ramachandra Rao, Srinivas Vinayak Shenoy, Dharshan Rangaswamy, Mohan V Bhojaraja, et al. (11 authors)
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation · 2022-05
Abstract
Abstract BACKGROUND AND AIMS The risk of developing tuberculosis (TB) is 10–25% in chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients. TB in CKD patients may have a mortality of 16–37%. Standard treatment with four drugs (Isoniazid, Rifampin, Pyrazinamide and Ethambutol) predisposes to side effects, drug interactions and incomplete adherence in this population. We studied adverse drug reactions and potential drug–drug interactions in CKD patients with TB. METHOD Consecutive patients with CKD and TB attending tertiary care hospitals in South India were included over a period of 12 months. CKD was diagnosed based on estimated GFR using CKD EPI and TB using standard methodology. Data on demographic details and adverse drug reactions were collected from case records. Potential drug–drug interactions were checked using Micromedex Drug-Reax® (Truven Health Analytics, Greenwood Village, Colorado, USA). Statistical analysis was done using SPSS version 20. RESULTS Of 1300 TB patients, 59 had CKD. The demographic details are as per Table 1. CONCLUSION In CKD with TB, adverse drug reactions were seen in 45.5% and potential drug–drug interactions were seen mostly with rifampin (28.81% in CKD).
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Ethambutol
- Pyrazinamide
- Kidney disease
- Drug
- Tuberculosis
- Isoniazid
- Drug interaction
- Internal medicine
- Adverse effect
- Population
- Adverse drug reaction
- Pharmacology
- Intensive care medicine