1 / 10

CASE 3

CASE 3. 62 yo man Genotype 1b chronic hepatitis C Cirrhosis No previous ascites/encephalopathy OGD revealed a few very small esophageal varices. CASE 3. Therapy was initiated with triple therapy including PEGINF/RBV/Telaprevir Baseline HCVRNA…3.6510E5. CASE 3. Week 0 HCVRNA…3.65x10E5

vanida
Download Presentation

CASE 3

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CASE 3 • 62 yo man • Genotype 1b chronic hepatitis C • Cirrhosis • No previous ascites/encephalopathy • OGD revealed a few very small esophageal varices

  2. CASE 3 • Therapy was initiated with triple therapy including PEGINF/RBV/Telaprevir • Baseline HCVRNA…3.6510E5

  3. CASE 3 • Week 0 HCVRNA…3.65x10E5 • Week 4 HCVRNA…<12 • Begins to develop swelling of ankles at week 5 and at week 6 develops hematemsis

  4. CASE 3 • OGD arranged…prepared in the usual fashion • Bleeding seemingly coming from esophagitis and not varices

  5. CASE 3 • Patient noted to be unable to protect airway and develops apneic episodes …requires intubation/respiratory support for 24 hrs CAUSE??

  6. Interactions with Midazolam • Midazolam is a CYP3A4 substrate • susceptible to interactions with inhibitors • 2.5 to 5-fold  AUC with saquinavir • 5 to 9-fold  AUC with boceprevir or telaprevir • case report of prolonged sedation with midazolam + SQV requiring flumazenil • Midazolam is contraindicated with HIV and HCV protease inhibitors • Alternatives: lorazepam (Ativan) orpropofol (Diprivan) [AIDS 1997;11:268-9; Victrelis & Incivek Product Monographs, 2011]

  7. Summary • High potential for pharmacokinetic interactions between directly acting antivirals and other drug classes • Steps to minimize/manage interactions: • ensure medication records are up to date at each visit (medication reconciliation) • use a systematic approach to identify combinations of potential concern • consult pertinent drug interaction resources, pharmacology/pharmacy specialists • consider therapeutic drug monitoring (if available) • patient counselling & close monitoring

More Related