Matching articles for "Page 32"
Correction: Ferumoxytol (Feraheme)
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • April 19, 2010; (Issue 1336)
In the Medical Letter article on Ferumoxytol (Feraheme) - A New Parenteral Iron Formulation (2010; 52:23), the last sentence of the Dosage, Administration and Cost paragraph should have listed the cost of 1...
In the Medical Letter article on Ferumoxytol (Feraheme) - A New Parenteral Iron Formulation (2010; 52:23), the last sentence of the Dosage, Administration and Cost paragraph should have listed the cost of 1 gram of sodium ferric gluconate (Ferrlecit) as about $600.
Correction: Vancomycin Dosing and Monitoring
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • April 20, 2009; (Issue 1310)
(Med Lett Drugs Ther 2009; 51:25) In the paragraph on dosing, the second-to-last sentence should have said that the new recommendations suggest considering use of an alternative antibiotic when the MIC for the...
(Med Lett Drugs Ther 2009; 51:25) In the paragraph on dosing, the second-to-last sentence should have said that the new recommendations suggest considering use of an alternative antibiotic when the MIC for the infecting organism is ≥2 mg/L, not >2 mg/L.
In Brief: Genetic Test for Carbamazepine-Induced Stevens-Johnson Syndrome
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • April 21, 2008; (Issue 1284)
Genetic Test for Carbamazepine-Induced Stevens-Johnson Syndrome Carbamazepine (Tegretol, Carbatrol, Equetro, and others), which is now used to treat not only epilepsy but also trigeminal neuralgia and manic...
Genetic Test for Carbamazepine-Induced Stevens-Johnson Syndrome Carbamazepine (Tegretol, Carbatrol, Equetro, and others), which is now used to treat not only epilepsy but also trigeminal neuralgia and manic episodes in patients with bipolar disorder,1 is a known cause of Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS). The incidence of carbamazepine-induced SJS in countries with mainly white populations is 1 to 6 per 10,000 new users of the drug, but Asian patients have a 10-fold higher incidence of this reaction. An association has been found between the human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-B*1502 allele and carbamazepine-induced SJS in a Chinese population.2 This allele occurs almost exclusively in Asians.3,4 The FDA is now recommending that Asian patients be tested for genetic susceptibility to carbamazepine-induced SJS before starting the drug. The genetic test should be available in most clinical chemistry labs.
1. Extended-release carbamazepine (Equetro) for bipolar disorder. Med Lett Drugs Ther 2005; 47:27.
2. WH Chung et al. Medical genetics: a marker for Stevens- Johnson syndrome. Nature 2004; 428:486.
3. C Lonjou et al. A marker for Stevens-Johnson syndrome. . . : ethnicity matters. Pharmacogenomics J 2006; 6:265.
4. A Alfirevic et al. HLA-B locus in Caucasian patients with carbamazepine hypersensitivity. Pharmacogenomics 2006; 7:813.
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1. Extended-release carbamazepine (Equetro) for bipolar disorder. Med Lett Drugs Ther 2005; 47:27.
2. WH Chung et al. Medical genetics: a marker for Stevens- Johnson syndrome. Nature 2004; 428:486.
3. C Lonjou et al. A marker for Stevens-Johnson syndrome. . . : ethnicity matters. Pharmacogenomics J 2006; 6:265.
4. A Alfirevic et al. HLA-B locus in Caucasian patients with carbamazepine hypersensitivity. Pharmacogenomics 2006; 7:813.
Download U.S. English