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Glecaprevir/Pibrentasvir and Darunavir Interaction

Drug interaction information between Glecaprevir/Pibrentasvir and Darunavir.

Glecaprevir/Pibrentasvir and Darunavir have a documented moderate interaction in FDA labeling.

FDA drug labeling documents a moderate-severity interaction between Glecaprevir/Pibrentasvir and Darunavir. Major interactions are generally avoided, moderate ones may need monitoring or a dose adjustment, and minor ones are usually low-risk. This page shows the documented mechanism and guidance. Label-documented interactions are not a complete safety review, so always confirm your own medications with a pharmacist or doctor. Educational information, not medical advice.

Drug A

Glecaprevir/Pibrentasvir

NS3/4A/NS5A Inhibitor (HCV)

Drug B

Darunavir

HIV Protease Inhibitor

How They Interact

Darunavir increases the amount of glecaprevir and pibrentasvir that stays in your body. This can make the hepatitis C medication more likely to cause side effects.

What To Do

This combination is not recommended, so you should ask your doctor for a different treatment option.

FDA Label Information

glecaprevir/pibrentasvir ↑ glecaprevir ↑ pibrentasvir Co-administration of darunavir/ritonavir with glecaprevir/pibrentasvir is not recommended.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I take Glecaprevir/Pibrentasvir and Darunavir together?

This is a moderate interaction. This combination is not recommended, so you should ask your doctor for a different treatment option.

How serious is the interaction between Glecaprevir/Pibrentasvir and Darunavir?

This interaction is classified as "moderate" severity by the FDA. Moderate interactions may worsen your condition or change how your medications work.

Why do Glecaprevir/Pibrentasvir and Darunavir interact?

Darunavir increases the amount of glecaprevir and pibrentasvir that stays in your body. This can make the hepatitis C medication more likely to cause side effects.

Understanding the Glecaprevir/Pibrentasvir and Darunavir Interaction

FDA-approved prescribing information for these two drugs flags their combination as a moderate-severity interaction. Glecaprevir/Pibrentasvir belongs to the NS3/4A/NS5A Inhibitor (HCV) class and Darunavir belongs to the HIV Protease Inhibitor class - two categories that can collide when co-prescribed. The mechanism described in FDA labeling is: Darunavir increases the amount of glecaprevir and pibrentasvir that stays in your body. Severity tiers matter: major flags generally advise avoidance, moderate flags often require monitoring or dose adjustment, and minor flags may only call for awareness.

Context around a specific patient determines real-world impact. Glecaprevir/Pibrentasvir has 38 total documented interactions on file in this dataset, and Darunavir has 101. Each additional medication compounds the interaction surface, which is why pharmacists run full-profile checks rather than evaluating one pair at a time. FDA-derived guidance for this pair is: This combination is not recommended, so you should ask your doctor for a different treatment option. Timing of doses, renal and hepatic function, age, and other concurrent prescriptions all shape whether a labeled interaction matters clinically.

An interaction flag is not a verdict. A large share of labeled interactions are managed routinely in clinical practice, the fix may be as simple as spacing doses or adding a monitoring test. Others require the prescriber to choose a different medication entirely. This page surfaces FDA-sourced labeling and openFDA data for educational purposes only; it is not medical advice and cannot account for your full clinical picture. Never start, stop, or adjust either Glecaprevir/Pibrentasvir or Darunavir based on a web page, speak with your prescriber or pharmacist before making any change.

Sources: FDA Drug Labels (SPL) via openFDA (2026). This is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider about drug interactions.