Pharmacoepidemiology of Potential Alcohol-prescription Drug Interactions Among Primary Care Patients with Alcohol-use Disorders
Overview
Pharmacy
Affiliations
Objective: To report on the proportion of individuals with alcohol-use disorders who take prescription medications that could interact with alcohol and on the proportion who recall advice to avoid alcohol with their medications.
Design: Secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial of telephone counseling.
Setting: 18 primary care practices in south-central and southeastern Wisconsin.
Patients: 897 adults with alcohol-use disorders as identified by systematic survey.
Intervention: Telephone and mail survey.
Main Outcome Measures: Patient-reported prescription medication use, potential for alcohol-drug interactions according to DrugDex, and patient-reported receipt of advice not to take alcohol with their medications.
Results: Of the 869 patients who provided usable information on prescription medication use, 348 (40.0%) were taking medications with alcohol interactions or proscriptions; the most frequently reported were bupropion, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, and various acetaminophen-containing compounds. Slightly more than 20% of patients were taking medications with moderate to severe alcohol interactions; over one-third of these 184 patients did not recall advice to avoid alcohol.
Conclusion: Practitioners who prescribe or dispense medications may need to enhance their efforts to advise patients about alcohol-drug interactions. Prescribing and dispensing medications that interact with alcohol present opportunities to administer alcohol screens and interventions.
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