Medicinal Chemistry

(Jacob Rumans) #1

interactions between two co-administered drugs, and are a common clinical problem.
Table 2.2 shows a partial listing of drugs with which cimetidine interacts; a number of
these interactions are clinically relevant.
When designing drugs for a chronic disease, the possibility of drug–drug interactions
should be taken into consideration: some may be beneficial, but most are not. Drug–drug
interactions may be classified as follows:



  1. Pharmacodynamic drug–drug interactions
    a. Competitive homotopic molecular targets
    Same site on the same receptor (e.g., diazepam and lorazepam are both ben-
    zodiazepines working at the same site on the GABA-A receptor).
    b. Non-competitive homotopic molecular targets
    Different sites on the same receptor (e.g., diazepam and phenobarbital both
    bind to the GABA-A receptor, but at different sites: benzodiazepine site versus
    barbiturate site).
    c. Convergent heterotopic molecular targets
    Different receptors targeting the same biochemical process (e.g., diazepam
    plus vigabatrin: diazepam is an agonist for the GABA-A receptor, upregu-
    lating GABA function; vigabatrin is a GABA transaminase enzyme
    inhibitor that upregulates GABA function by increasing concentrations of
    GABA in the brain).
    d. Divergent heterotopic molecular targets
    Different receptors targeting different biochemical processes, but affecting
    the same disease process (e.g., diazepam plus phenytoin: diazepam is an
    agonist for the GABA-A receptor, while phenytoin is an antagonist of the
    voltage-gated Na+channel receptor; both drugs work to prevent seizures, but
    by entirely different mechanisms).

  2. Pharmacokinetic drug–drug interactions
    a. A—Absorption competition (similar structures compete for absorption in gut).
    b. D—Distribution competition (competitive binding on albumin within
    bloodstream).


102 MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY


Table 2.2Cimetidine Drug Interactions
Amitriptyline Phenytoin
Carbamazepine Propafenone
Chloroquine Propranolol
Diazepam Quinidine
Doxepin Quinine
Labetalol Sulfonylurea
Lidocaine Theophylline
Metoprolol Triamterene
Metronidazole Valproic acid
Moricizine Verapamil
Oxazepam Warfarin
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