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Table 4 The main drugs interacting with voriconazole

From: How to manage aspergillosis in non-neutropenic intensive care unit patients

Drug

Interaction with voriconazole and management strategy

Drugs contraindicated

 

  Astemizole, cisapride, ergot alkaloids, quinidine, sirolimus, terfenadine

Their levels are increased by voriconazole, avoid co-administration. Switch to a drug with no or with predictable interactions (for example, cyclosporine)

  Carbamazepine, long-acting barbiturates, rifampicin

They decrease voriconazole levels, avoid co-administration. Switch to a drug with no interactions (for example, levetiracetam)

  Rifabutin

Co-administration decreases voriconazole levels and increases rifabutin levels (contraindicated according to FDA, not according to EMA, see below), avoid co-administration

Drugs not contraindicated but if co-administered the dose of voriconazole must be modified (increased)

 

  Phenytoin

Increase voriconazole oral maintenance dose from 200 mg to 400 mg every 12 hours (100–200 mg every 12 hours if <40 kg) and intravenous maintenance dose to 5 mg/kg every 12 hours; monitor for phenytoin toxicity

  Efavirenz

Increase voriconazole oral maintenance dose from 200 mg to 400 mg every 12 hours (100–200 mg every 12 hours if <40 kg) and reduce efavirenz dose by 50% to 300 mg/day

  Rifabutin (according to FDA contraindicated as rifampicin)

According to EMA, increase oral voriconazole maintenance dose from 200 to 350 mg every 12 hours (100–200 mg every 12 hours if <40 kg) and intravenous maintenance dose to 5 mg/kg every 12 hours; monitor for rifabutin toxicity

Other drugs (apart from ritonavir, their levels are increased by voriconazole)

 

  Low dose ritonavir (100 mg every 12 hours)

Co-administration decreases levels of both voriconazole and ritonavir; better avoided

  Cyclosporine, omeprazole, tacrolimus and warfarin

Their blood levels are increased by voriconazole and their dose should be reduced (by half for cyclosporine and by two-thirds for tacrolimus). Monitor serum levels of cyclosporine and tacrolimus or INR for warfarin

  Other drugs such as benzodiazepines, opioid analgesics (for example, oxycodone or fentanyl), sulfonylureas, statins, vinca alkaloids, calcium channel blockers

Their levels are increased by voriconazole co-administration. Monitor closely for their side effects, discontinue if toxicity is suspected or consider decreasing dosage immediately when voriconazole is started

  1. EMA, European Medicines Agency; FDA, Food and Drug Administration; INR, international normalized ratio.