Factors associated with drug–drug interactions involving citalopram in the UK Biobank
Benjamin Laplace, Win Lee Edwin Wong, Marco Menchetti, Diana De Ronchi, Paolo Fusar-Poli, Giuseppe Fanelli, Alessandro Serretti, Cathryn M. Lewis, Chiara Fabbri

TL;DR
This study finds that many people taking citalopram, an antidepressant, are also prescribed drugs that interact with it, especially older women with complex health issues.
Contribution
The study identifies sociodemographic and clinical factors linked to drug–drug interactions with citalopram using UK Biobank data.
Findings
46.8% of citalopram users had at least one drug–drug interaction, with proton pump inhibitors being the most common.
DDIs were more common in older women with severe depression and comorbid conditions like cardiovascular disorders.
Cytochrome 2C19 activity was not associated with drug–drug interactions involving citalopram.
Abstract
Adults with mood and/or anxiety disorders have increased risks of comorbidities, chronic treatments and polypharmacy, increasing the risk of drug–drug interactions (DDIs) with antidepressants. To use primary care records from the UK Biobank to assess DDIs with citalopram, the most widely prescribed antidepressant in UK primary care. We classified drugs with pharmacokinetic or pharmacodynamic DDIs with citalopram, then identified prescription windows for these drugs that overlapped with citalopram prescriptions in UK Biobank participants with primary care records. We tested for associations of DDI status (yes/no) with sociodemographic and clinical characteristics and with cytochrome 2C19 activity, using univariate tests, then fitted multivariable models for variables that reached Bonferroni-corrected significance. In UK Biobank primary care data, 25 508 participants received…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTreatment of Major Depression · Bipolar Disorder and Treatment · Schizophrenia research and treatment
