midostaurin has been researched along with Hallucinations* in 1 studies
1 other study(ies) available for midostaurin and Hallucinations
Article | Year |
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Clinically relevant bidirectional drug-drug interaction between midostaurin and voriconazole.
Midostaurin is often prescribed with azole antifungals in patients with leukaemia, either for aspergillosis prophylaxis or treatment. Midostaurin is extensively metabolized by cytochrome (CYP) 3A4. In addition, it inhibits and induces various CYPs at therapeutic concentrations. Thus, midostaurin is associated with a high potential for drug-drug interactions (DDIs), both as a substrate (victim) and as a perpetrator. However, data on midostaurin as a perpetrator of DDIs are scarce, as most pharmacokinetic studies have focused on midostaurin as a victim drug. We report a clinically relevant bidirectional DDI between midostaurin and voriconazole during induction treatment. A 49-year-old woman with acute myeloid leukaemia developed invasive pulmonary aspergillosis after induction chemotherapy. She was treated with voriconazole at standard dosage. Six days after starting midostaurin, she developed visual hallucinations with a concurrent sharp increase in voriconazole blood concentration (C Topics: Antifungal Agents; Drug Interactions; Female; Hallucinations; Humans; Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute; Middle Aged; Voriconazole | 2023 |