Pharmacokinetics of Cyclosporin Microemulsion in Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Authors: Latteri M.1; Angeloni G.1; Silveri N.G.1; Manna R.1; Gasbarrini G.1; Navarra P.2

Source: Clinical Pharmacokinetics, Volume 40, Number 6, 2001 , pp. 473-483(11)

Publisher: Adis International

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Abstract:

Objective: To obtain a pharmacokinetic profile of cyclosporin microemulsion formulation in patients with inflammatory bowel disease.

Patients and participants: 58 consecutive patients (19 women and 39 men), aged 16 to 64 years (mean age 38 years), with a diagnosis of ulcerative colitis (29 patients) or Crohn's disease (29 patients).

Methods: Patients were treated with oral doses of cyclosporin microemulsion ranging from 200 to 400mg daily. Blood samples were collected after 7 days of treatment; blood was drawn at 0, 0.5, 1, 2, 3, 5, 7 and 12 hours after the morning dose. In 23 patients out of 29 with ulcerative colitis and 23 out of 29 with Crohn's disease, these profiles were repeated immediately before hospital discharge, which took place an average of 18 days after admission. Blood specimens were assayed for cyclosporin immunoreactivity on the day of blood withdrawal by a radioimmunoassay technique.

Main outcome measures and results: In the range of doses employed, the average peak plasma drug concentration (C) and area under the concentration-time curve to 12 hours tended to increase linearly with the dose (from 782.35 to 1607.98 µg/L and from 3612 to 7221 µg · h/L for doses of 200mg and 400mg, respectively), whereas the time to C (t) and elimination half-life (t) ranged between 78 and 95.2 min and 85.5 and 162 min, respectively, and did not appear to change with the dose. After dose-normalisation by transformation of data into percentage increase over baseline (trough) concentration for each patient, single kinetic parameters for the whole study population (n = 58) could be calculated (C 620% vs baseline, t 86.5 min, t 115 min). Comparison between patients with Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis showed that the latter had higher C values (702% compared with 543% vs baseline, p < 0.05) whereas t and t values overlapped.

Conclusions: The pharmacokinetic parameters of cyclosporin microemulsion in patients with inflammatory bowel disease are broadly similar to those previously measured in healthy volunteers and in other disorders requiring cyclosporin treatment.

Keywords: Crohn's disease; Cyclosporin, pharmacokinetics; Immunosuppressants, pharmacokinetics; Inflammatory bowel disease; Ulcerative colitis

Language: English

Document Type: Original article

Affiliations: 1: Institute of Internal Medicine, Catholic University Medical School, Rome, Italy 2: Institute of Pharmacology, Catholic University Medical School, Rome, Italy *

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