Drugs that alkalinize the urine ( ) reduce renal elimination of quinidine.
Altered pharmacokinetics of quinidine:carbonic-anhydrase inhibitors, sodium bicarbonate, thiazide diuretics
By pharmacokinetic mechanisms that are not well understood, quinidine levels are increased by coadministration of or . Very rarely, and again by mechanisms not understood, quinidine levels are decreased by coadministration of .
amiodaronecimetidinenifedipine
Hepatic elimination of quinidine may be accelerated by coadministration of drugs ( ) that induce production of cytochrome P450IIIA4.
phenobarbital, phenytoin, rifampin
Perhaps because of competition for the P450IIIA4 metabolic pathway, quinidine levels rise when is coadministered.
ketaconazole
Coadministration of usually does not affect quinidine pharmacokinetics, but in some studies the ß-blocker appeared to cause increases in the peak serum levels of quinidine, decreases in quinidine’s volume of distribution, and decreases in total quinidine clearance. The effects (if any) of coadministration of on quinidine pharmacokinetics have not been adequately studied.
propranololother ß-blockers
Hepatic clearance of quinidine is significantly reduced during coadministration of , with corresponding increases in serum levels and half-life.
verapamil
Quinidine slows the elimination of and simultaneously reduces digoxin’s apparent volume of distribution. As a result, serum digoxin levels may be as much as doubled. When quinidine and digoxin are coadministered, digoxin doses usually need to be reduced. Serum levels of are also raised when quinidine is coadministered, although the effect appears to be smaller.
Altered pharmacokinetics of other drugs:digoxindigitoxin
By a mechanism that is not understood, quinidine potentiates the anticoagulatory action of , and the anticoagulant dosage may need to be reduced.
warfarin
Cytochrome P450IID6 is an enzyme critical to the metabolism of many drugs, notably including , some , and most Constitutional deficiency of cytochrome P450IID6 is found in less than 1% of Orientals, in about 2% of American blacks, and in about 8% of American whites. Testing with debrisoquine is sometimes used to distinguish the P450IID6-deficient “poor metabolizers” from the majority-phenotype “extensive metabolizers”.
mexiletinephenothiazinespolycyclic antidepressants.
When drugs whose metabolism is P450IID6-dependent are given to poor metabolizers, the serum levels achieved are higher, sometimes much higher, than the serum levels achieved when identical doses are given to extensive metabolizers. To obtain similar clinical benefit without toxicity, doses given to poor metabolizers may need to be greatly reduced. In the cases of prodrugs whose actions are actually mediated by P450IID6-produced metabolites (for example, and , whose analgesic and antitussive effects appear to be mediated by morphine and hydromorphone, respectively), it may not be possible to achieve the desired clinical benefits in poor metabolizers.
codeinehydrocodone
Quinidine is not metabolized by cytochrome P450IID6, but therapeutic serum levels of quinidine inhibit the action of cytochrome P450IID6, effectively converting extensive metabolizers into poor metabolizers. Caution must be exercised whenever quinidine is prescribed together with drugs metabolized by cytochrome P450IID6.
Perhaps by competing for pathways of renal clearance, coadministration of quinidine causes an increase in serum levels of .
procainamide
Serum levels of are increased when quinidine is coadministered.
haloperidol
Presumably because both drugs are metabolized by cytochrome P450IIIA4, coadministration of quinidine causes variable slowing of the metabolism of . Interactions with other dihydropyridine calcium-channel blockers have not been reported, but these agents (including , , and ) are all dependent upon P450IIIA4 for metabolism, so similar interactions with quinidine should be anticipated.
nifedipinefelodipinenicardipinenimodipine
Quinidine’s anticholinergic, vasodilating, and negative inotropic actions may be additive to those of other drugs with these effects, and antagonistic to those of drugs with cholinergic, vasoconstricting, and positive inotropic effects. For example, when quinidine and are coadministered in doses that are each well tolerated as monotherapy, hypotension attributable to additive peripheral α-blockade is sometimes reported.
Altered pharmacodynamics of other drugs:verapamil
Quinidine potentiates the actions of depolarizing (succinylcholine, decamethonium) and nondepolarizing ( -tubocurarine, pancuronium) . These phenomena are not well understood, but they are observed in animal models as well as in humans. In addition, addition of quinidine to the serum of pregnant women reduces the activity of pseudocholinesterase, an enzyme that is essential to the metabolism of succinylcholine.
dneuromuscular blocking agentsin vitro
Quinidine has no clinically significant effect on the pharmacokinetics of or
Non-interactions of quinidine with other drugs:diltiazem, flecainide, mephenytoin, metoprolol, propafenone, propranolol, quinine, timolol,tocainide.
Conversely, the pharmacokinetics of quinidine are not significantly affected by or Quinidine’s pharmacokinetics are also unaffected by cigarette smoking.
caffeine, ciprofloxacin, digoxin, diltiazem, felodipine, omeprazole,quinine.