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Clinically Significant Drug Interactions Between Psychotropic Agents and Repurposed COVID-19 Therapies

Journal

CNS DRUGS
Volume 35, Issue 4, Pages 345-384

Publisher

ADIS INT LTD
DOI: 10.1007/s40263-021-00811-2

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Relevant drug interactions between psychotropic agents and COVID-19 therapies may lead to clinically significant issues, mainly due to pharmacodynamic and pharmacogenetic factors, requiring tailored management strategies based on disease severity and clinical conditions.
As many patients with underlying psychiatric disorders may be infected with COVID-19, and COVID-19-affected subjects may frequently experience a new onset of psychiatric manifestations, concomitant use of psychotropic medications and COVID-19 therapies is expected to be highly likely and raises concerns of clinically relevant drug interactions. In this setting, four major mechanisms responsible for drug interactions involving psychotropic agents and COVID-19 therapies may be identified: (1) pharmacokinetic drug-drug interactions mainly acting on cytochrome P450; (2) pharmacodynamic drug-drug interactions resulting in additive or synergistic toxicity; (3) drug-disease interactions according to stage and severity of the disease; and (4) pharmacogenetic issues associated with polymorphisms of cytochrome P450 isoenzymes. In this review, we summarise the available literature on relevant drug interactions between psychotropic agents and COVID-19 therapies, providing practical clinical recommendations and potential management strategies according to severity of illness and clinical scenario.

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