학술논문

In Vitro Metabolic Stability of Moisture-Sensitive Rabeprazole in Human Liver Microsomes and Its Modulation by Pharmaceutical Excipients
Document Type
Article
Source
Archives of Pharmacal Research, 31(3), pp.406-413 Mar, 2008
Subject
약학
Language
English
ISSN
1976-3786
0253-6269
Abstract
A reliable method to assess in vitro metabolic stability of rabeprazole and its modulation by Generally Recognized As Safe (GRAS)-listed pharmaceutical excipients was established in human liver microsomes. The metabolic stability of rabeprazole decreased as a function of incubation time, resulting in the formation of thioether rabeprazole via nonenzymatic degradation and enzymatic metabolism. Buffer type was also a determining factor for the degree of both nonenzymatic degradation and enzymatic metabolism. The net extent of enzymatic drug metabolism, obtained by calculating the difference in drug degradation between a microsomepresent reaction system and a microsome-free solution, was about 9.20 ± 0.67% in phosphate buffer and 2.27±1.76% in Tris buffer, respectively. Rabeprazole exhibited first-order kinetics in microsome-free solution but showed non-linear kinetics in the microsome-present reaction system. The maximal velocity, Vmax, in phosphate buffer was 5.07 µg mL-1 h-1 and the Michaelis- Menten constant, Km, was 10.39 µg mL-1 by computer-fitting to the classical Michaelis-Menten equation for pattern of time-dependent change in the substrate concentration. The intact drug and its thioether form were well resolved and successfully identified by HPLC chromatography and liquid chromatography mass spectroscopy (LC/MS). The metabolic stability of rabeprazole was also modulated by the presence of pharmaceutical excipients. Among the five pharmaceutical excipients tested, poloxamer 188 and Gelucire 44/14 had potentially inhibitory effects on rabeprazole metabolism in human liver microsomes (p < 0.05). A greater understanding of metabolic stability and its modulation by pharmaceutical excipients would be useful for optimizing the bioavailability of rabeprazole at the early formulation stages.