Kato Kimiyasu, Yasui-Furukori Norio, Fukasawa Takashi, Aoshima Toshiaki, Suzuki Akihito, Kanno Muneaki, Otani Koichi
Department of Neuropsychiatry, Yamagata University School of Medicine, Yamagata, Japan.
Ther Drug Monit. 2003 Aug;25(4):473-7. doi: 10.1097/00007691-200308000-00010.
The effects of itraconazole, a potent inhibitor of cytochrome P450 (CYP) 3A4, on the plasma kinetics of quazepam and its two active metabolites after a single oral dose of the drug were studied. Ten healthy male volunteers received itraconazole 100 mg/d or placebo for 14 days in a double-blind randomized crossover manner, and on the fourth day of the treatment they received a single oral 20-mg dose of quazepam. Blood samplings and evaluation of psychomotor function by the Digit Symbol Substitution Test and Stanford Sleepiness Scale were conducted up to 240 h after quazepam dosing. Itraconazole treatment did not change the plasma kinetics of quazepam but significantly decreased the peak plasma concentration and area under the plasma concentration-time curve of 2-oxoquazepam and N-desalkyl-2-oxoquazepam. Itraconazole treatment did not affect either of the psychomotor function parameters. The present study thus suggests that CYP 3A4 is partly involved in the metabolism of quazepam.