Drug interactions in dermatological systemic treatment

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Abstract

Severe pharmacological side effects have an occurrence of 5–7% and represent a frequent reason for hospital admission. The prevalence of undesired pharmacological side effects during hospitalization is even higher with approximately 11.5%. The causes are often interactions between drugs due to the polypharmacy of multimorbid older patients. On average, a 65-year-old male patient will simultaneously be taking 5 medications. Due to the increasing use of systemic drugs in dermatology and the simultaneously increasing polypharmacy, knowledge of interactions between medications is essential for dermatologists in order to avoid severe side effects of drugs. This article provides assistance in order to identify patients and medications with a high risk for severe interactions and, therefore, to avoid the occurrence of undesired effects or the reduction of the therapeutic effects of active substances. We would like to point out that this article deals with individual aspects and does not mean that the testing of individual drug interactions with interaction programs can be omitted. It should also not be neglected that in addition to prescription-only drugs, foodstuffs, dietary supplements and herbs can also lead to interactions with medications.

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Krause, K., Jahn, K., & Homey, B. (2021, January 1). Drug interactions in dermatological systemic treatment. Hautarzt. Springer Medizin. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00105-020-04726-9

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