Acetaminophen does not impair clearance of zidovudine

To determine whether concurrent treatment with acetaminophen and zidovudine impairs clearance of zidovudine, thereby increasing the risk for zidovudine-induced hematologic toxicity. Dose escalation, drug interaction study. University clinical research center. Patients with the acquired immunodeficie...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Annals of internal medicine Vol. 114; no. 11; p. 937
Main Authors: Sattler, F R, Ko, R, Antoniskis, D, Shields, M, Cohen, J, Nicoloff, J, Leedom, J, Koda, R
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States 01-06-1991
Subjects:
Online Access:Get more information
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:To determine whether concurrent treatment with acetaminophen and zidovudine impairs clearance of zidovudine, thereby increasing the risk for zidovudine-induced hematologic toxicity. Dose escalation, drug interaction study. University clinical research center. Patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) or advanced AIDS-related complex. Acetaminophen and 200 mg of zidovudine simultaneously every 4 hours. For 13 patients, the unit dosage of acetaminophen was 325 mg for 3 days; for 8 patients, the dosage was 650 mg for 3 days; and, for 6 patients, the dosage was 650 mg for 7 days. Zidovudine clearance and production of the glucuronide conjugate of zidovudine were assessed after acetaminophen treatment. Neither zidovudine clearance nor production of the glucuronide conjugate of zidovudine was impaired after treatment with acetaminophen. Clearance of zidovudine was actually accelerated by 5%, 11%, and 33% with the three acetaminophen regimens, respectively (P = 0.002 by analysis of variance; P = 0.04 for linear trend when changes in the area-under-the-curve for zidovudine were compared). Because serum concentrations of zidovudine decrease after the coadministration of acetaminophen, a pharmacokinetic interaction between zidovudine and acetaminophen is unlikely to increase the risk for hematologic toxicity associated with zidovudine.
ISSN:0003-4819
DOI:10.7326/0003-4819-114-11-937