학술논문

Effects of Didanosine Formulations on the Pharmacokinetics of Amprenavir.
Document Type
Article
Source
Pharmacotherapy. Jul2003, Vol. 23 Issue 7, p835. 8p.
Subject
*DRUG side effects
*PHARMACODYNAMICS
*CONFIDENCE intervals
*PHARMACOKINETICS
*PHARMACOLOGY
Language
ISSN
0277-0008
Abstract
Study Objectives. To determine the effects of concurrent, single doses of didanosine (both buffered and encapsulated enteric-coated bead formulations) on amprenavir steady-state pharmacokinetics, and to determine the effect of staggered dosing of the buffered formulation. Design. Two-period, single-sequence, prospective, open-label drug interaction study with a 10-day washout interval. Setting. Clinical research unit. Subjects. Sixteen healthy volunteers without human immunodeficiency virus infection. Intervention. Amprenavir 600 mg twice/day was given for the first 4 days of each treatment period, with 12-hour pharmacokinetic evaluations conducted on the last 2 days of each period. Amprenavir was administered according to the following sequential treatments (all fasting): amprenavir alone, concurrent with the encapsulated enteric-coated bead formulation of didanosine. Measurements and Main Results. Plasma was collected 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 12 hours after dosing and assayed for amprenavir by using high-performance liquid chromatography. Noncompartmental pharmacokinetic parameters were determined. Geometric mean ratios for each treatment relative to amprenavir alone were determined and reported with 90% confidence intervals (CIs). No significant trends were noted in predose concentrations measured during either period. Area under the concentration-time curve during one 12-hour dosing interval (AUC[sub12]) was found to be bioequivalent for all treatments. Peak drug concentration (C[submax]) was reduced by 15% on average with concurrent administration of buffered didanosine, and bioequivalence was not demonstrated for this parameter. For concurrent enteric-coated didanosine, geometric mean ratios for C[submax] and AUC[sub12] were 0.93 and 0.94, respectively. For buffered... [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]