Ngo Ngoc, Yan Zhixia, Graf Tyler N, Carrizosa Daniel R, Kashuba Angela D M, Dees E Claire, Oberlies Nicholas H, Paine Mary F
Division of Pharmacotherapy and Experimental Therapeutics, Eshelman School of Pharmacy, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7360, USA.
Drug Metab Dispos. 2009 Mar;37(3):514-22. doi: 10.1124/dmd.108.024968. Epub 2008 Dec 29.
An in vivo study in rats showed a cranberry juice product to inhibit the intestinal first-pass metabolism of the CYP3A substrate nifedipine. However, a clinical study involving the CYP3A probe substrate midazolam and a different cranberry juice product showed no interaction. Because the composition of bioactive components in natural products can vary substantially, a systematic in vitro-in vivo approach was taken to identify a cranberry juice capable of inhibiting enteric CYP3A in humans. First, the effects of five cranberry juices, coded A through E, were evaluated on midazolam 1'-hydroxylation activity in human intestinal microsomes. Juice E was the most potent, ablating activity at 0.5% juice (v/v) relative to control. Second, juice E was fractionated to generate hexane-, chloroform-, butanol-, and aqueous-soluble fractions. The hexane- and chloroform-soluble fractions at 50 microg/ml were the most potent, inhibiting by 77 and 63%, respectively, suggesting that the CYP3A inhibitors reside largely in these more lipophilic fractions. Finally, juice E was evaluated on the oral pharmacokinetics of midazolam in 16 healthy volunteers. Relative to water, juice E significantly increased the geometric mean area under the curve (AUC)(0-infinity) of midazolam by approximately 30% (p=0.001), decreased the geometric mean 1'-hydroxymidazolam/midazolam AUC(0-infinity) ratio by approximately 40% (p<0.001), and had no effect on geometric mean terminal half-life, indicating inhibition of enteric, but not hepatic, CYP3A-mediated first-pass metabolism of midazolam. This approach both showed a potential drug interaction liability with cranberry juice and substantiated that rigorous in vitro characterization of dietary substances is required before initiation of clinical drug-diet interaction studies.
一项在大鼠体内进行的研究表明,一种蔓越莓汁产品可抑制CYP3A底物硝苯地平的肠道首过代谢。然而,一项涉及CYP3A探针底物咪达唑仑和另一种蔓越莓汁产品的临床研究却未显示出相互作用。由于天然产品中生物活性成分的组成可能有很大差异,因此采用了系统的体外-体内方法来确定一种能够抑制人体肠道CYP3A的蔓越莓汁。首先,评估了编码为A至E的五种蔓越莓汁对人肠微粒体中咪达唑仑1'-羟化活性的影响。果汁E的作用最强,相对于对照,在0.5%(体积/体积)果汁时可消除活性。其次,对果汁E进行分馏,得到己烷、氯仿、丁醇和水溶性馏分。50μg/ml的己烷和氯仿可溶馏分作用最强,分别抑制77%和63%,这表明CYP3A抑制剂主要存在于这些亲脂性更强的馏分中。最后,在16名健康志愿者中评估了果汁E对咪达唑仑口服药代动力学的影响。相对于水,果汁E使咪达唑仑的几何平均曲线下面积(AUC)(0至无穷大)显著增加约30%(p = 0.001),使几何平均1'-羟基咪达唑仑/咪达唑仑AUC(0至无穷大)比值降低约40%(p < 0.001),并且对几何平均末端半衰期没有影响,表明抑制了肠道而非肝脏中CYP3A介导的咪达唑仑首过代谢。这种方法既显示了蔓越莓汁潜在的药物相互作用风险,也证实了在启动临床药物-饮食相互作用研究之前,需要对饮食物质进行严格的体外特性鉴定。