Pharmacokinetic interactions of herbal medicines for the treatment of chronic hepatitis

J Food Drug Anal. 2017 Apr;25(2):209-218. doi: 10.1016/j.jfda.2016.11.010. Epub 2016 Dec 22.

Abstract

Chronic liver disease is a serious global health problem, and an increasing number of patients are seeking alternative medicines or complementary treatment. Herbal medicines account for 16.8% of patients with chronic liver disease who use complementary and alternative therapies. A survey of the National Health Insurance Research Database in Taiwan reported that Long-Dan-Xie-Gan-Tang, Jia-Wei-Xia-Yao-San, and Xiao-Chai-Hu-Tang (Sho-saiko-to) were the most frequent formula prescriptions for chronic hepatitis used by traditional Chinese medicine physicians. Bioanalytical methods of herbal medicines for the treatment of chronic hepatitis were developed to investigate pharmacokinetics properties, but multicomponent herbal formulas have been seldom discussed. The pharmacokinetics of herbal formulas is closely related to efficacy, efficiency, and patient safety of traditional herbal medicines. Potential herbal formula-drug interactions are another essential issue during herbal formula administration in chronic hepatitis patients. In a survey with the PubMed database, this review article evaluates the existing evidence-based data associated with the documented pharmacokinetics profiles and potential herbal-drug interactions of herbal formulas for the treatment of chronic hepatitis. In addition, the existing pharmacokinetic profiles were further linked with clinical practice to provide insight for the safety and specific use of traditional herbal medicines.

Keywords: National Health Insurance Research Database; chronic hepatitis; herbal medicine; lamivudine; pharmacokinetics.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Drugs, Chinese Herbal
  • Hepatitis, Chronic*
  • Herbal Medicine*
  • Humans
  • Taiwan

Substances

  • Drugs, Chinese Herbal
  • shosaiko-to

Grants and funding

This work was supported in part by research grants from the National Science Council (MOST105-2113-M-010-004) Taiwan and 10401-62-004; TCH104-02 from Taipei City Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan.