Yoo Dae-Hyoung, Kim In Sook, Van Le Thi Kim, Jung Il-Hoon, Yoo Hye Hyun, Kim Dong-Hyun
Department of Life and Nanopharmaceutical Sciences and Department of Pharmacy, College of Pharmacy, Kyung Hee University, Seoul, Korea (D.H.Y., T.K.V.L., I.H.J., D.H.K.); and Institute of Pharmaceutical Science and Technology and College of Pharmacy, Hanyang University, Ansan, Korea (I.S.K., H.H.Y.).
Department of Life and Nanopharmaceutical Sciences and Department of Pharmacy, College of Pharmacy, Kyung Hee University, Seoul, Korea (D.H.Y., T.K.V.L., I.H.J., D.H.K.); and Institute of Pharmaceutical Science and Technology and College of Pharmacy, Hanyang University, Ansan, Korea (I.S.K., H.H.Y.)
Drug Metab Dispos. 2014 Sep;42(9):1508-13. doi: 10.1124/dmd.114.058354. Epub 2014 Jun 19.
Orally administered drugs may be metabolized by intestinal microbial enzymes before absorption into the blood. Accordingly, coadministration of drugs affecting the metabolic activities of gut microbes (e.g., antibiotics) may lead to drug-drug interactions (DDI). In this study, gut microbiota-mediated DDI were investigated by studying the pharmacokinetics of lovastatin in antibiotic-treated rats. Incubation of lovastatin with human and rat fecalase preparations produced four metabolites, M1 (demethylbutyryl metabolite), M4 (hydroxylated metabolite), M8 (the active hydroxy acid metabolite), and M9 (hydroxylated M8), indicating involvement of the gut microbiota in lovastatin metabolism. The plasma concentration-time profiles of M8 were compared after oral administration of lovastatin to control rats or those treated with either ampicillin (100 mg/kg) or an antibiotic mixture consisting of cefadroxil (150 mg/kg), oxytetracycline (300 mg/kg), and erythromycin (300 mg/kg). Pharmacokinetic analyses indicated that systemic exposure to M8 was significantly lower in antibiotic-treated rats compared with controls. In addition, fecal M8 formation decreased by 58.3 and 59.9% in the ampicillin- and antibiotic mixture-treated rats, respectively. These results suggested that antibiotic intake may reduce the biotransformation of orally administered drugs by gut microbiota and that the subsequent impact on microbiota metabolism could result in altered systemic concentrations of either the intact drug and/or its metabolite(s).
口服药物在吸收进入血液之前可能会被肠道微生物酶代谢。因此,同时服用影响肠道微生物代谢活性的药物(如抗生素)可能会导致药物相互作用(DDI)。在本研究中,通过研究洛伐他汀在抗生素处理大鼠体内的药代动力学,对肠道微生物群介导的DDI进行了研究。洛伐他汀与人及大鼠粪便酶制剂孵育产生了四种代谢物,M1(去甲基丁酰代谢物)、M4(羟基化代谢物)、M8(活性羟酸代谢物)和M9(M8的羟基化产物),表明肠道微生物群参与了洛伐他汀的代谢。在给对照大鼠或用氨苄西林(100mg/kg)或由头孢羟氨苄(150mg/kg)、土霉素(300mg/kg)和红霉素(300mg/kg)组成的抗生素混合物处理的大鼠口服洛伐他汀后,比较了M8的血浆浓度-时间曲线。药代动力学分析表明,与对照组相比,抗生素处理大鼠体内M8的全身暴露显著降低。此外,在氨苄西林和抗生素混合物处理的大鼠中,粪便中M8的形成分别减少了58.3%和59.9%。这些结果表明,摄入抗生素可能会降低肠道微生物群对口服药物的生物转化,随后对微生物群代谢的影响可能会导致完整药物和/或其代谢物的全身浓度发生改变。