(Clinical Chemistry. 1998;44:415-419.)
© 1998 American Association for Clinical Chemistry, Inc.
Therapeutic drug monitoring in special populations
Philip D. Walson
Abstract
Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) is commonly used to maintain
"therapeutic" drug concentrations. Even in compliant patients, with
"average" drug kinetics, TDM is useful to identify the causes of
unwanted or unexpected responses, prevent unnecessary diagnostic
testing, improve clinical outcomes, and even save lives. TDM has
greatest promise in certain special populations who are:
(a) prone to under- or overrespond to usual dosing
regimens, (b) least able to tolerate, recognize, or
communicate drug effects, or who are (c) intentionally or
accidentally misdosed. TDM is especially useful in patients at the
extremes of age, in adolescents, and in patients who are either taking
multiple drugs or expressing unusual pharmacokinetics as a result of
physiological, environmental, or genetic causes.
Less-well-appreciated uses of TDM include prevention of dangerousunderdosing of patients, investigation of
adverse drug reactions, and identification of serious medication
errors, even for a number of drugs that are not traditionally
monitored. TDM can be useful for some drugs in any patient and for most
drugs in some special populations.