02407nas a2200265 4500000000100000008004100001260001200042100001600054700001300070700001300083700001400096700001500110700001700125700001100142700001400153700002300167700001400190700001300204245013500217856009400352300001400446490000700460520166000467022001402127 2020 d c01/20201 aCerqueira S1 aSantos L1 aMorelo E1 aJúnior A1 ade Sousa C1 aGonçalves R1 aNeto G1 aMarques D1 aRibeiro Sampaio RN1 aKurizky P1 aGomes CM00aThe interference of polypharmacy and the importance of clinical pharmacy advice in the treatment of leprosy: a case-control study. uhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7269535/pdf/1678-9849-rsbmt-53-e20200114.pdf ae202001140 v533 a

INTRODUCTION: Although supervised doses are essential for reducing leprosy treatment failure, the impact of specific drug interactions has rarely been assessed. This study aimed to estimate the risk of leprosy treatment suspension in patients receiving polypharmacy.

METHODS We performed this case-control study in which the primary outcome was defined as the need to discontinue multibacillary leprosy treatment for at least one supervised dose, and the main risk factor was the detection of polypharmacy. Multivariate analysis by logistic regression was used for calculating odds ratio (OR).

RESULTS: This study included 103 patients, of whom 43 needed to discontinue leprosy treatment (hemolysis = 26, hepatitis = 2, hemolysis associated with hepatitis = 6, and suspected treatment resistance = 9) and the rest did not. The severity of drug interactions had no effect on treatment discontinuation. Patients who used five or more drugs in addition to leprosy treatment had almost a 4-fold greater risk of treatment suspension (OR, 3.88; 95% confidence interval: 1.79-9.12; p < 0.001). The number of drugs used also positively influenced the occurrence of hemolysis (p < 0.001). No patient presented evidence of molecular resistance to rifampicin, dapsone, or ofloxacin treatment, as evidenced by genetic sequencing detection of rpoB, folp1, and gyrA mutations.

CONCLUSIONS: Polypharmacy has deleterious effects on the already difficult-to-adhere-to treatment of leprosy and polypharmacy induces hemolysis. Additional measures must be taken to avoid the undesirable effects of inadequate polypharmacy.

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