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Published in: Clinical Pharmacokinetics 4/2012

01-04-2012 | Original Research Article

Predicting Drug Candidate Victims of Drug-Drug Interactions, using Microdosing

Authors: Mrs Marie Croft, Brendan Keely, Ian Morris, Lan Tann, Graham Lappin

Published in: Clinical Pharmacokinetics | Issue 4/2012

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Abstract

Objective

The aim of this crossover human male volunteer study was to investigate the utility of microdosing in the investigation of drug-drug interactions.

Methods

A mixture of midazolam, tolbutamide, caffeine and fexofenadine were administered as a micro-dose (25 mg each) before and after administration of a combined pharmacological dose of ketoconazole (400 mg) and fluvoxamine (100 mg) to inhibit P-glycoprotein and metabolism by cytochrome P450 (CYP) 1A2, CYP3A4 and CYP2C9.

Results

When administered alone, pharmacokinetics for all four microdosed compounds scaled well with those reported for therapeutic doses and with previously performed microdose studies. The pharmacokinetics of each compound administered as a microdose were significantly altered after the administration of ketoconazole and fluvoxamine, showing statistically significant (p < 0.01) 12.8-, 8.1- and 3.2-fold increases in the area under the plasma concentration-time curve from time zero to infinity (AUC∞) for midazolam, caffeine and fexofenadine, respectively. A 1.8-fold increase (not statistically significant) in AUC∞ was observed for tolbutamide. The changes in pharmacokinetics mediated by ketoconazole and fluvoxamine were quantitatively consistent with previously reported, non-microdose, drug-drug interaction data from studies including the same compounds.

Conclusion

The initial data reported here demonstrate the utility of microdosing to investigate the risk of development drugs being victims of drug-drug interactions.
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Metadata
Title
Predicting Drug Candidate Victims of Drug-Drug Interactions, using Microdosing
Authors
Mrs Marie Croft
Brendan Keely
Ian Morris
Lan Tann
Graham Lappin
Publication date
01-04-2012
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Clinical Pharmacokinetics / Issue 4/2012
Print ISSN: 0312-5963
Electronic ISSN: 1179-1926
DOI
https://doi.org/10.2165/11597070-000000000-00000

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