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Assessment of a candidate marker constituent predictive of a dietary substance-drug interaction: case study with grapefruit juice and CYP3A4 drug substrates.
- Source :
-
The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics [J Pharmacol Exp Ther] 2014 Dec; Vol. 351 (3), pp. 576-84. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Sep 24. - Publication Year :
- 2014
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Abstract
- Dietary substances, including herbal products and citrus juices, can perpetrate interactions with conventional medications. Regulatory guidances for dietary substance-drug interaction assessment are lacking. This deficiency is due in part to challenges unique to dietary substances, a lack of requisite human-derived data, and limited jurisdiction. An in vitro-in vivo extrapolation (IVIVE) approach to help address some of these hurdles was evaluated using the exemplar dietary substance grapefruit juice (GFJ), the candidate marker constituent 6',7'-dihydroxybergamottin (DHB), and the purported victim drug loperamide. First, the GFJ-loperamide interaction was assessed in 16 healthy volunteers. Loperamide (16 mg) was administered with 240 ml of water or GFJ; plasma was collected from 0 to 72 hours. Relative to water, GFJ increased the geometric mean loperamide area under the plasma concentration-time curve (AUC) significantly (1.7-fold). Second, the mechanism-based inhibition kinetics for DHB were recovered using human intestinal microsomes and the index CYP3A4 reaction, loperamide N-desmethylation (KI [concentration needed to achieve one-half kinact], 5.0 ± 0.9 µM; kinact [maximum inactivation rate constant], 0.38 ± 0.02 minute(-1)). These parameters were incorporated into a mechanistic static model, which predicted a 1.6-fold increase in loperamide AUC. Third, the successful IVIVE prompted further application to 15 previously reported GFJ-drug interaction studies selected according to predefined criteria. Twelve of the interactions were predicted to within the 25% predefined criterion. Results suggest that DHB could be used to predict the CYP3A4-mediated effect of GFJ. This time- and cost-effective IVIVE approach could be applied to other dietary substance-drug interactions to help prioritize new and existing drugs for more advanced (dynamic) modeling and simulation and clinical assessment.<br /> (Copyright © 2014 by The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics.)
- Subjects :
- Adult
Biomarkers blood
Cross-Over Studies
Female
Forecasting
Humans
Loperamide administration & dosage
Male
Microsomes drug effects
Microsomes enzymology
Middle Aged
Prospective Studies
Substrate Specificity drug effects
Substrate Specificity physiology
Young Adult
Beverages
Citrus paradisi
Cytochrome P-450 CYP3A metabolism
Food-Drug Interactions physiology
Loperamide blood
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1521-0103
- Volume :
- 351
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 25253884
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1124/jpet.114.216838