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The Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine and the College of Psychiatry of Ireland
Did the Great Irish Famine increase Schizophrenia?
Study of presentations for involuntary admission to a Cork approved centre
Mental illness among the homeless: Prevalence study in a Dublin homeless hostel
Preferences of dress and address: views of attendees and mental health professionals of the psychiatric services
Psychiatrists in their eyes: Children’s drawings of what a psychiatrist looks like
Suicide ideation, psychological adjustment and mental health service support: A screening study in an Irish secondary school sample
Selective Mutism: A prevalence study of primary school children in the Republic of Ireland
Psychotherapy training in Ireland: A survey of college tutors
Graphology and psychiatric diagnosis: Is the writing on the wall?
Psychiatric power: A personal view
Coming through depression: A mindful approach to recovery
Leadership with consciousness
Homesickness: An American history
Professor Hugh Lionel Freeman (1930-2011)
Interaction of Duloxetine with Warfarin; A cautionary report
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Interaction of Duloxetine with Warfarin; A cautionary report
by Mugtaba Osman, Elaine Greene
 
letters to the editor


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Dear Editor,

 

Drug-drug interactions are common in older adults. Four out of five people aged over 75 years take at least one medicine and thirty- six percent of this age group take four medicines or more. 1

 

Warfarin is primarily cleared by the liver through the cytochrome P450 system. Many of the isoenzymes involved are also involved in the metabolism of psychotropic agents. 2 Drug interactions with Warfarin are generally well described. Data regarding the interaction of warfarin with duloxetine are limited. There are only two case reports in the literature which report conflicting findings. 3, 4 Additionally, a small open-label study reported no significant interaction between the two agents. 5

 

Warfarin is normally indicated for serious vascular conditions. So, in an elderly patient who is attending the psychiatric service and is on warfarin will have higher risk for serious interactions. This is exactly the subject of this case report.

 

Case Report


An eighty seven year old gentleman was admitted for treatment of a severe depressive episode with prominent anxiety symptoms. Relevant medical co-morbidities included paroxysmal atrial fibrillation, for which he was on life-long warfarin prophylaxis. Notably, his warfarin dose had been stable for several months prior to admission. He presented with a treatment resistant depression and failed to respond to trials of antidepressant medications (including venlafaxine, bupropion, SSRI’s, mirtazapine and agomelatine)   and to augmentation with several different agents (including risperidone, lithium, olanzapine, amisulpride and aripiprazole). He refused the option of ECT. A trial of duloxetine was moderately successful. The dose was increased cautiously to 90 mg with good effect. At this point it was noted that his INR had increased significantly. This was temporally related to an increase in duloxetine from 60 to 90 mg daily. There had been no other significant changes in his management or his medical condition that would explain the increased INR. Review of his INR readings and comparison with his duloxetine treatment revealed a stepwise increase in INR which coincided with the increase in duloxetine.

 

As this patient’s treatment resistant depression had responded to duloxetine, a decision was made to continue duloxetine treatment at this higher dose. This necessitated a forty percent dose reduction in warfarin to stabilise the INR at a safe therapeutic level.

 

In light of the temporal relationship between the increase in duloxetine and the rise of INR, the most likely explanation lies at the cytochrome P450 level. It is likely that duloxetine may potentiate the anticoagulant effect of warfarin through displacing warfarin from CYP 1A2 isoenzymes.6 This would result in a net increase in bioactive warfarin and a consequent increase in INR.

 

Discussion


A higher number of people enter old age nowadays thanks for recent advances in health measures.7 Therefore, more people over age 65 are expected to be on combination of warfarin plus another one or more medications, especially psychiatric medications. This report adds to the scarce evidence that currently exists for possibility of drug-drug interactions between duloxetine and warfarin. It is the first report, we know of, to describe a potentiating effect for duloxetine upon the action of warfarin in older adults. It stresses the need to closely monitor INR levels for elderly patients on warfarin, especially if it is combined with duloxetine for treatment of depressive illness or other psychiatric or non-psychiatric disorder. It appears that duloxetine can synergistically potentiate the effect of warfarin, thereby, leading to a bleeding hazard. Further research is urgently needed in this area.

 

*Mugtaba Osman,

Psychiatric Registrar,

St Patrick’s University Hospital,

Dublin 8,

Ireland

E-mail mugtabasulman@yahoo.co.uk

 

Elaine Greene,

Consultant Old Age Psychiatrist,

Jonathan Swift Clinic,

St. James’s Hospital,

Dublin 8,

Ireland

 

*Correspondence

 

 

References


  1. Department of Health (2001) National Service Framework for Older People. London: Stationery Office.
  2.  Limke KK, Shelton AR, Elliott ES. Fluvoxamine interaction with warfarin. Ann Pharmacother. 2002;36:1890-1892
  3. Glueck C J, Khalil Q, Wang P. Interaction of Duloxetine and Warfarin Causing Severe Elevation of International Normalized Ratio. JAMA, April 2006; 13: 1517-1518.
  4. Monastero R. Potential drug-drug interaction between duloxetine and acenocoumarol in a patient with Alzheimer's disease,  Clinical Therapeutics, December 2007; 29: 2706-2709
  5. Frincu-Mallos C. Duloxetine Does Not Modify Anticoagulant Effects of Warfarin: Presented at American College of Clinical Pharmacology (ACCP) 37th Annual Meeting, September 2008.
  6. Glueck C J, Khalil Q, Wang P. Interaction of Duloxetine and Warfarin Causing Severe Elevation of International Normalized Ratio. JAMA, April 2006; 13: 1517-1518.
  7. Kapplan B J, Sadock’s V A,Psynopsis of Psychiatry Behavioural Sciences/ Clinical Psychiatry, 10th edition. In Geriatric Psychiatry, chapter 56, page 1348, Lippincott W&W, 2007.

 

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