Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 4 de 4
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Anesthesiology ; 135(2): 326-339, 2021 08 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34019627

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The anesthetic ketamine after intravenous dosing is nearly completely metabolized to R- and S-stereoisomers of the active norketamine (analgesic, psychoactive) and 2,6-hydroxynorketamine (potential analgesic, antidepressant) as well as the inactive dehydronorketamine. Oral administration favors the formation of 2,6-hydroxynorketamines via extensive presystemic metabolism. The authors hypothesized that plasma exposure to 2,6-hydroxynorketamines relative to the psychoactive ketamine is greater after prolonged-release ketamine tablets than it is after intravenous ketamine. METHODS: Pharmacokinetics of ketamine after intravenous infusion (5.0 mg) and single-dose administrations of 10, 20, 40, and 80 mg prolonged-released tablets were evaluated in 15 healthy white human subjects by means of a controlled, ascending-dose study. The stereoisomers of ketamine and metabolites were quantified in serum and urine by validated tandem mass-spectrometric assays and evaluated by noncompartmental pharmacokinetic analysis. RESULTS: After 40 mg prolonged-release tablets, the mean ± SD area under the concentrations-time curve ratios for 2,6-hydroxynorketamine/ketamine were 18 ± 11 (S-stereoisomers) and 30 ± 16 (R-stereoisomers) compared to 1.7 ± 0.8 and 3.1 ± 1.4 and after intravenous infusion (both P < 0.001). After 10 and 20 mg tablets, the R-ratios were even greater. The distribution volumes at steady state of S- and R-ketamine were 6.6 ± 2.2 and 5.6 ± 2.1 l/kg, terminal half-lives 5.2 ± 3.4 and 6.1 ± 3.1 h, and metabolic clearances 1,620 ± 380 and 1,530 ± 380 ml/min, respectively. Bioavailability of the 40 mg tablets was 15 ± 8 (S-isomer) and 19 ± 10% (R-isomer) and terminal half-life 11 ± 4 and 10 ± 4 h. About 7% of the dose was renally excreted as S-stereoisomers and 17% as R-stereoisomers. CONCLUSIONS: Prolonged-release ketamine tablets generate a high systemic exposure to 2,6-hydroxynorketamines and might therefore be an efficient and safer pharmaceutical dosage form for treatment of patients with chronic neuropathic pain compared to intravenous infusion.


Subject(s)
Analgesics/metabolism , Analgesics/pharmacokinetics , Ketamine/metabolism , Ketamine/pharmacokinetics , Administration, Oral , Adult , Analgesics/administration & dosage , Delayed-Action Preparations , Female , Healthy Volunteers , Humans , Ketamine/administration & dosage , Male , Reference Values , Young Adult
2.
J Clin Pharmacol ; 59(10): 1319-1330, 2019 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30973998

ABSTRACT

The quaternary ammonium compound trospium chloride is poorly absorbed from 2 "absorption windows" in the jejunum and cecum/ascending colon, respectively. To confirm whether intestinal P-glycoprotein (P-gp) is involved, a 4-period, crossover drug interaction study with trospium chloride after intravenous (2 mg) and oral administration (30 mg) without and after comedication of clarithromycin (500 mg), an inhibitor for P-gp, was initiated in 12 healthy subjects. Pharmacokinetics of trospium was evaluated using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, noncompartmental evaluation, and pharmacokinetic modeling. Trospium chloride was poorly absorbed after oral administration (absolute bioavailability, ∼8%-10%). About 30% of the bioavailable dose fraction was absorbed from the "narrow window". Comedication with clarithromycin increased steady-state distribution volumes by ∼27% (P < .01). Bioavailability was not increased as hypothesized. The geometric mean ratios (90% confidence interval) for area under the plasma concentration-time curve, maximum concentration, and renal clearance accounted for 0.75 (0.56-1.01), 0.64 (0.45-0.89), and 1.00 (0.90-1.13), respectively. The amount of trospium absorbed from the "narrow window" was reduced in all subjects but from the "wider window" in only 9 of them. Bioavailability was strongly predicted by the maximum absorption rate of trospium in the distal "window" (rs2  = 0.910, P < .0001). In conclusion, the P-gp inhibitor clarithromycin significantly increases distribution volumes but not oral absorption of trospium. The amount absorbed from the "narrow window" was lowered in all subjects. However, the extent of all influences seems not to be of clinical relevance.


Subject(s)
ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B, Member 1/antagonists & inhibitors , Benzilates/pharmacokinetics , Clarithromycin/pharmacology , Drug Interactions/physiology , Muscarinic Antagonists/pharmacokinetics , Nortropanes/pharmacokinetics , Administration, Intravenous/methods , Administration, Oral , Adult , Area Under Curve , Biological Availability , Cross-Over Studies , Female , Healthy Volunteers , Humans , Male
3.
Int J Pharm ; 515(1-2): 367-373, 2016 Dec 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27765726

ABSTRACT

Intestinal P-glycoprotein is regio-selectively expressed and is a high affinity, low capacity efflux carrier for the cationic, poorly permeable trospium. Organic cation transporter 1 (OCT1) provides lower affinity but higher capacity for trospium uptake. To evaluate regional intestinal permeability, absorption profiles after gastric infusion of trospium chloride (30mg/250ml=[I]2) for 6h and after swallowing 30mg immediate-release tablets in fasted and fed healthy subjects, were evaluated using an inverse Gaussian density function to model input rate and mean absorption time (MAT). Trospium chloride was slowly absorbed (MAT ∼10h) after gastric infusion involving two processes with different input rates, peaking at about 3h and 7h. Input rates and MAT were influenced by dosage form and meal. In conclusion, trospium is absorbed from two "windows" located in the jejunum and cecum/ascending colon, whose uptake capacity might result from local abundance and functional interplay of P-glycoprotein and OCT1.


Subject(s)
Benzilates/metabolism , Cecum/metabolism , Colon, Ascending/metabolism , Intestinal Absorption/physiology , Jejunum/metabolism , Nortropanes/metabolism , ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B, Member 1/metabolism , Adult , Female , Healthy Volunteers , Humans , Male , Organic Cation Transporter 1/metabolism , Permeability , Tablets/metabolism , Young Adult
4.
Eur J Pharm Biopharm ; 108: 214-219, 2016 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27639346

ABSTRACT

In the present study temperature, pH and pressure profiles of nine healthy human volunteers were investigated after ingestion of the SmartPill® under conditions simulating the fasted state treatment in bioavailability and bioequivalence studies. In a previously published study the same subjects received the SmartPill® under fed conditions as recommended by the FDA. Since large non-digestible objects are mainly emptied during phase III of the interdigestive migrating motor complex, the gastric residence time of the SmartPill® was found to be clearly shorter under fasting conditions. Intragastric pH values during the initial 5min were similar with an identical median value of pH 4.6. Interestingly, the median lowest observed intragastric pH value in fasted state was about one pH unit higher than that under fed conditions. Highest pressure activity was observed within the stomach, in relation to gastric emptying. In fasted state, pressure values upon gastric emptying varied strongly between 30mbar and 304mbar, whereas after fed state ingestion values of at least 240mbar could always be observed. The data showed highly variable gastrointestinal parameters even under fasting conditions which must be considered when evaluating clinical studies and developing biorelevant in vitro test methods especially for large non-disintegrating dosage forms.


Subject(s)
Drug Carriers/chemistry , Fasting , Therapeutic Equivalency , Adult , Biological Availability , Body Mass Index , Digestion , Drug Delivery Systems , Female , Gastric Emptying/physiology , Gastrointestinal Transit/physiology , Healthy Volunteers , Humans , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Male , Pressure , Solubility , Stomach/drug effects , Temperature , Time Factors , Young Adult
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...