Division of Pharmacotherapy and Experimental Therapeutics, Eshelman School of Pharmacy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7569, USA.
Curr Drug Metab. 2010 Nov;11(9):778-92. doi: 10.2174/138920010794328869.
Successful delivery of promising new chemical entities via the oral route is rife with challenges, some of which cannot be explained or foreseen during drug development. Further complicating an already multifaceted problem is the obvious, yet often overlooked, effect of dietary substances on drug disposition and response. Some dietary substances, particularly fruit juices, have been shown to inhibit biochemical processes in the intestine, leading to altered pharmacokinetic (PK), and potentially pharmacodynamic (PD), outcomes. Inhibition of intestinal CYP3Amediated metabolism is the major mechanism by which fruit juices, including grapefruit juice, enhances systemic exposure to new and already marketed drugs. Inhibition of intestinal non-CYP3A enzymes and apically-located transport proteins represent recently identified mechanisms that can alter PK and PD. Several fruit juices have been shown to inhibit these processes in vitro, but some interactions have not translated to the clinic. The lack of in vitroin vivo concordance is due largely to a lack of rigorous methods to elucidate causative ingredients prior to clinical testing. Identification of specific components and underlying mechanisms is challenging, as dietary substances frequently contain multiple, often unknown, bioactive ingredients that vary in composition and bioactivity. A translational research approach, combining expertise from clinical pharmacologists and natural products chemists, is needed to develop robust models describing PK/PD relationships between a given dietary substance and drug of interest. Validation of these models through well-designed clinical trials would facilitate development of common practice guidelines for managing drug-dietary substance interactions appropriately.
经口服途径成功递送有前景的新化学实体充满了挑战,其中一些在药物开发过程中无法解释或预见。进一步使本已复杂的问题复杂化的是饮食物质对药物处置和反应的明显但通常被忽视的影响。一些饮食物质,特别是果汁,已被证明会抑制肠道中的生化过程,导致药代动力学(PK)和潜在的药效学(PD)改变。果汁(包括葡萄柚汁)抑制肠道 CYP3A 介导的代谢是其增强新的和已上市药物全身暴露的主要机制。最近发现的抑制肠道非 CYP3A 酶和顶端定位转运蛋白的机制可改变 PK 和 PD。体外研究表明,几种果汁可抑制这些过程,但有些相互作用并未转化为临床。体外与体内缺乏一致性主要是由于在临床测试前缺乏阐明因果成分的严格方法。鉴定特定成分和潜在机制具有挑战性,因为饮食物质通常含有多种,通常是未知的,具有不同组成和生物活性的生物活性成分。需要一种转化研究方法,结合临床药理学家和天然产物化学家的专业知识,来开发描述特定饮食物质与感兴趣药物之间 PK/PD 关系的稳健模型。通过精心设计的临床试验验证这些模型将有助于制定适当管理药物-饮食物质相互作用的常见实践指南。