Artigo Revisado por pares

Effect of Heat Treatment of Potentially Infected Blood Samples on Therapeutic Drug Monitoring of Selected Drugs

1993; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 27; Issue: 7-8 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1177/106002809302700715

ISSN

1542-6270

Autores

David M. Burger, Elisabeth A van Dijk, R. van Gijn, Jos H. Beijnen,

Tópico(s)

Pharmacological Effects and Toxicity Studies

Resumo

To investigate the effect of heart treatment on the outcome of drug analysis in whole blood and serum for eight drugs routinely assayed for therapeutic monitoring.All blood and serum samples (n = 373) received at the pharmacy laboratory for therapeutic monitoring of carbamazepine, digoxin, gentamicin, kanamycin, phenobarbital, phenytoin, theophylline, and valproic acid were heated at 60 degrees C for 30 minutes. Serum was subsequently assayed by fluorescence polarization immunoassay (TDx).The study was conducted at the analytical laboratory of the pharmacy, using standard laboratory procedures.Analyses of heated samples were compared with analyses of untreated samples using a paired Wilcoxon signed-rank test.Serum concentrations of phenytoin from treated whole blood, and gentamicin in treated serum, were significantly lower than in untreated samples. These differences, however, were small, clinically irrelevant, and lie within assay variation intervals. Heat treatment did not influence the outcome of analyses for carbamazepine, digoxin, kanamycin, phenobarbital, theophylline, and valproic acid.Heat treatment of whole blood and serum samples of the investigated drugs does not influence the outcome of drug analysis, although drug instability cannot be fully excluded. Heat treatment can protect laboratory technicians from HIV infection without influencing therapeutic monitoring of these drugs.

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