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. 2019 Apr 20;105(6):1345–1361. doi: 10.1002/cpt.1435

Table 1.

List of recommended considerations and requirements of interventional DDI studies and examples of potential pitfalls in DDI studies and their interpretation

Typical requirements of a DDI study Potential pitfalls of DDI studies
General design issues
Healthy volunteers if no safety concerns Risky drugs given to healthy subjects
Patients if safety concerns or clinical focus Bias and confounding in observational patient studies
Crossover design Parallel group design may produce bias
Sufficient washout to eliminate carry‐over effects Insufficient washout (e.g., a slowly eliminated metabolite still present)
Placebo control and blinding (e.g., in case of pharmacodynamic end points)
Dietary control/restrictions as necessary
Appropriate sample collection, storage and analytical method to cover > 80–90% of the AUC of the victim drug and metabolites Inaccurate or insensitive analytical method, degradation of analytes during storage or analysis
Monitoring of perpetrator pharmacokinetics (compliance, quantification of exposure, presence after washout) Perpetrator exposure not documented
Pharmacodynamic assessment Pharmacodynamic assessments neglected
DNA samples
Biomarker samples in selected cases
Necessary prior knowledge considered in design Deficiencies in preclinical and early clinical data (e.g., in mass‐balance studies)
Safety issues
Strict exclusion criteria (e.g., contraindications, pregnancy) Careless exclusion criteria leading to risk of adverse effects
History, clinical examination, laboratory tests, and genotyping as necessary
Safety monitoring and sufficient follow‐up Insufficient follow‐up (residual drug effects)
Precautions and interventions to avoid adverse effects, even in the worst‐case DDI scenario Rescue interventions not prearranged
Blood sampling should generally not exceed the volume of blood donation
Perpetrator (inhibitor/inducer)
Selectivity and strength of index inhibitor (> 5‐fold increase in AUC possible) Suboptimal strength
Nonselective inhibitor
Clinically relevant (high) dose depending on tolerability Too low dose, leading to weak inhibition
Dosing to reach and maintain steady‐state, including time‐dependent inhibition and induction Clinically atypical dosing
Duration of dosing too short/long to document maximal DDI
Victim substrate
Sensitivity of index substrate Lack of sensitivity (particularly if not considered in interpretation)
Documented selectivity of index substrate Lack of selectivity (particularly if not considered in interpretation)
High first‐pass and short half‐life preferable Long half‐life victim with a short‐acting or “presystemic” inhibitor
Monitoring a specific metabolic ratio can be useful
Dose, expecting the worst‐case scenario Too high dose
Staggered dosing Victim drug administered too soon (or too long) after perpetrator to document maximal DDI

AUC, area under plasma concentration‐time curve; DDI, drug–drug interaction.