View clinical trials related to Drug Interactions.
Filter by:The purpose of this project is to implement and evaluate a shared-decision making (SDM) tool called DDInteract that was developed to support decision making for drug-drugs interactions while on oral anticoagulants. DDInteract will be implemented in clinics at the University of Utah, University of Colorado and University of Vanderbilt. DDInteract will be launched from within the electronic health record (EHR) retrieving patient-specific risk factors, will calculate the risk of harm, and will allow providers and patients to dynamically explore "what if" scenarios to optimize treatment and minimize risk. DDInteract will enable shared-decision making using individually-tailored information on the potential benefits and harms of drug interactions in anticoagulated patients.
The aim of this study is to identify and assess new health-associated risk factors, including clinical-pharmacological risk factors. The cohort is built using telecommunication approaches. The associations between clinical-pharmacological, social, demographic, behavioral, and environmental characteristics will be assessed. The continuous depersonalized online survey is performed using the original informational resources in the form of specially designed web-site aimed at identification and assessment of population-based pharmacotherapy patterns including characteristics of self-medication, biologically active food supplement intake, polypharmacy, and adverse drug-drug interactions in the people residing in the ecological conditions of various regions of the country. The invitations to participate in the online survey are sent via the SMS messages using the SMS-Target tool provided by OOO T2 Mobile Company. The survey is performed online at www.zdorov.tpu.ru and www.zdorov.expert both specifically designed for questionnaire publication and data accumulation.
To investigate the effect of rifampicin on the pharmacokinetics of methotrexate.
This is a Phase 1, open-label, fixed-sequence, 2-part DDI study. Subjects will participate in only 1 study part.
In this open label, single-sequence study, subjects received one dose of XS004 Dasatinib Amorphous Solid Dispersion Film-Coated Tablet, 90 mg Test Formulation at the start of study on Day 1 and Day 6. Omeprazole 40 mg was administered on Day 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6. The study was conducted in two groups.
Drug interactions (IFF) are events that occur when multiple drugs are administered at the same time to an individual. People with arterial hypertension generally require therapeutic regimens based on 2 or more drugs for their adequate control, which makes them patients with polypharmacy. When these patients require urgent medical attention, there is a risk that IFFs will occur between their base treatment and the drugs that are prescribed to solve the added condition. Objective. To determine the frequency of pharmacological interactions between antihypertensive regimens and drugs used in the emergency service of Hospital General de Zona No 51 (HGZ 51). Material and methods: Observational, descriptive, and prospective study. The participants will be eligible patients with systemic arterial hypertension treated in the emergency room of HGZ 51 in Gómez Palacio, Durango. Support systems will be used for clinical decision, to identify potential IFFs and to be able to classify them according to their mechanism (pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics) and severity. A descriptive statistical analysis will be carried out in the SPSS program using measures of frequency, dispersion and central tendency.
This is a single center, open-label, fixed sequence Phase 1, drug-drug interaction (DDI) study in healthy subjects.
Researchers in this study want to learn how the study drug BAY1817080 interacts with another drug called rosuvastatin (brand name: Crestor) and affects the way the body absorbs, distributes and excretes rosuvastatin in healthy adult male and female participants (drug-drug interaction study). The study drug BAY1817080 is a new drug under development with a goal to suppress pain and chronic cough. It works by binding to and blocking proteins related to pain in the body. Rosuvastatin is an approved and marketed drug to lower high levels of "bad" cholesterol (a waxy, fat-like substance found in blood). Both drugs interact with the same proteins (molecules) in the human body, and as a result, the study drug may affect the way rosuvastatin is taken up and used by the body when applied together. Participants in this study will be asked to visit the clinic 3 times over a period of 3 to 4 weeks. Each participant will receive rosuvastatin tablets twice with at least 11 days in between and the study drug tablets twice daily for 14 days. Blood samples will be taken from the participants to measure the blood levels of rosuvastatin.
This study will evaluate drug-drug interactions between cannabis extracts containing Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and THC+ Cannabinoids (CBD) and probe drugs for select CYP450 pathways including: caffeine (CYP1A2), omeprazole (CYP2C19), losartan (CYP2C9), dextromethorphan (CYP2D6), and midazolam (CYP3A).
The primary purpose of the study is to characterize the safety profile of lorlatinib in the presence of a moderate CYP3A4/5 inducer, modafinil. In another drug-drug interaction study for lorlatinib coadministered with a strong CYP3A4/5 inducer, rifampin, all participants experienced increases in liver enzymes after receiving the combination of a single dose lorlatinib (100 mg) with rifampin (600 mg daily (QD)) after multiple doses of rifampin. The AST and ALT continued to increase over the next 24-48 hours, but recovered below the upper limit of normal for all participants upon discontinuation of rifampin. We hypothesize the combination of lorlatinib with the moderate CYP3A inducer modafinil will not have a safety findings related to liver enzyme elevation similar to what occurred in the study with rifampin and lorlatinib.