including acetylcholine, dopamine, serotonin, melatonin, and kynurenine. The defi-
ciency of these neurotransmitters is associated with depression, dementia and cogni-
tion decline, insomnia, and disturbance in circadian rhythms affecting the sleep and
wake-fullness cycles (Moore and O'Keeffe 1999; Nayak et al. 2019). Serotonin is
responsible for the modulation of some developmental events, such as neuron
migration, cell differentiation, cell division, or synaptogenesis. Serotonin is also
involved in the control of appetite, sleep, memory and learning, temperature regula-
tion, mood, behavior (including sexual function), cognition or mental disorders
among others (Nayak et al. 2019). Additionally, there are reports indicating changes
in the blood-brain barrier (BBB) among aged people, especially with neurological
disorders (Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease) which influence the traversing
of drugs from plasma through BBB and reaching CNS. The BBB changes are bound
to cause unwanted responses to psychotropic drugs (Mehta et al. 2015). As men-
tioned earlier, inappropriate drug use and high incidence of ADRs are the major
reasons for high hospital admissions or discontinuation of treatment among elderly.
Geriatrics with dementia or cognitive impairment are at a much greater risk to drug-
related ADRs. The main PK and clinical features along with typical ADRs
associated with antidepressant drugs in elderly versus young adults are summarized
in Table 15.2.
15.12 Clinically Significant Interactions Between Antidepressant
Drugs: Mechanisms of Interactions and Prescribing
Strategies
Drug-drug interactions (DDIs) are caused via ADME alterations, consequently
producing changes in the bioavailability and PK profiles of co-administered drugs.
Some DDIs may produce therapeutic benefits; however, most often DDIs cause
unwanted side effects. Some DDIs can cause clinically adverse reactions resulting
from PK changes. The PK interactions include all alterations during the ADME
phase of one drug induced by another co-administered drug. Mostly, DDIs occur due
to drug-induced inhibition or induction of CYP450 isoenzymes. The interactions
may be additive or potentiative as well as agonistic or antagonistic in manner and
may occur at the cellular or molecular level, or at the receptor site, and mechanisti-
cally can be classified as PK & PD interactions. There is some general information
available about the CYP450 effects of antidepressants: there are known potent
inhibitors of different CYP450 3A4 and CYP450 2D6 isoenzymes. For example,
fluoxetine and paroxetine are potent inhibitors of CYP450 2C19 and can also act as
inhibitors of fluvoxamine and TCA (amitriptyline and imipramine). As a rule, TCAs
are victims of metabolism via hydroxylation; therefore, every CYP450 2D6 inhibitor
can increase the serum levels of tricyclic antidepressant drugs. Combined adminis-
tration of TCAs and SSRIs often results in strong PK interactions, which require
careful titration of TCAs with SSRIs, and avoiding the combination may offer the
best solution, too (English et al. 2012). DDIs are an important reason for hospital
15
The Importance of Drug Dose Adjustment in Elderly Patients with Special. . .
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