Critical Pharmacodynamic Warning
methadone affects the 2B6 metabolic pathway.
When patients take methadone concurrently with drugs metabolized by 2B6, the risk of adverse effects may significantly increase. This interaction affects drug clearance and systemic exposure, potentially leading to toxicity or reduced therapeutic efficacy.
Clinical Impact: As a moderate inhibitor , methadone can alter the metabolism of substrate drugs, requiring careful monitoring and potential dose adjustments.
Clinical Overview for methadone
This page outlines known interaction pathways involving methadone, focusing primarily on its profile as a Moderate inhibitor affecting the 2B6 pathway.
Enzyme Interaction Profile
methadone demonstrates moderate inhibitor potency against 2B6. Clinical significance of this interaction requires further evaluation.
Inhibitor
A substance that slows down or prevents an enzyme from metabolizing a drug. Inhibitors can lead to increased drug concentrations in the body, potentially causing toxicity or enhanced therapeutic effects.
Clinical Example: methadone affects 2B6Inducer
A substance that speeds up enzyme activity, causing drugs to be cleared from the body faster. Inducers can reduce drug effectiveness by lowering concentrations below therapeutic levels.
Known Inducers: efavirenzInteraction Details
| Drug Name | methadone |
| Affected Enzyme | 2B6 |
| Inhibitor Strength | Moderate inhibitor Unknown |
| Inducers | efavirenz |
| Inhibitors | voriconazole |
Clinical Recommendations
Consult primary literature for guidance.
- Therapeutic drug levels
- Adverse effect monitoring
- Clinical response assessment
- Consider dose reduction
- Evaluate alternative therapies
- Adjust based on response
Quick Facts
13423
2B6
Enzyme Inhibition
Unknown
Clinical Significance
Clinical significance requires further evaluation.
Information Sources
- FDA Drug Interaction Database
- Clinical Pharmacology Guidelines
- Pharmaceutical Labeling Information
- Published Clinical Studies
Last updated: June 14, 2026