Medicine In Space

 After Katy Perry went to space this week, I was inspired to look into what medicine they bring to space and other details! Here are some key points from a NASA Pharmaceutical Care Technical Brief (https://www.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/ochmo-tb-006-pharmaceuticals.pdf) 

In space, crewmembers are at risk for: 

  • Bone fracture due to spaceflight-induced changes to bone
  • Renal stone formation
  • CV adaptations contributing to adverse mission performance and health 
  • Performance decrements and adverse health resulting from sleep loss, circadian resynchronization, and work overload 

There are concerns about medication efficacy and stability:

  • Altered gravity, radiation, temperature/humidity (radiation has not been shown to significantly interfere with usability of medications, but long-duration missions require additional considerations)
  • Studies show limited alteration in changes (including rate of degradation), but most medications lost less than 20% of API 
  • Concerns about long-duration spaceflight that extends past the drug expiration date --> most studies show medications extend long (1-10 years) after expiration dates of 1-2 years
Stability studies of medications stored over 550 earth days flown on ISS: 
Melatonin was had been expired by 11 months and was not within USP guidelines (90-110% API).


Our bodies experience physiological changes in space: 
  • Altered Vd 
  • Altered free drug concentration
  • Alterred renal/hepatic clearance 
  • Faster and more variable intestinal transit rate 
  • Alterations in immune response 

What medications do crew members use the most? (24 crewmembers on 10 missions over a 10-year period, not including OTC or previously prescribed meds)



71% of crew members used a sleep aid. SAS = space motion sickness 

What medications to they bring?
They consider logistical factors like stowage, inventory, and formulary needs. Medication kits vary. The International Space Station has two medical kits with 190 medications divided into "packs"
  • Emergency medical (epinephrine, lidocaine)
  • Convenience med (bacitracin, allergy meds, analgesics) 
  • Oral med (antibiotics, SSRI/SNRIs, birth control, antiemetics, heartburn medications, lisinopril, metoprolol, nitroglycerin) 
  • Topical and injectable med (antibiotics, antipsychotics, ketamine, diazepam, inhalers, hydromorphone)
  • Diagnostic 
  • Minor treatment 
  • Medical supply 
  • IV supply 
  • Physician equipment pack 




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