Sanga Madhu, Banach John, Ledvina Aaron, Modi Nishit B, Mittur Aravind
a Covance Laboratories Inc , Madison , WI , USA and.
b Department of Clinical Pharmacology , Impax Specialty Pharma (A Division of Impax Laboratories, Inc.) , Hayward , CA , USA.
Xenobiotica. 2016 Nov;46(11):1001-16. doi: 10.3109/00498254.2015.1136989. Epub 2016 Jan 21.
1. The disposition of nefopam, a serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor, was characterized in eight healthy male volunteers following a single oral dose of 75 mg [(14)C]-nefopam (100 μCi). Blood, urine, and feces were sampled for 168 h post-dose. 2. Mean (± SD) maximum blood and plasma radioactivity concentrations were 359 ± 34.2 and 638 ± 64.7 ngEq free base/g, respectively, at 2 h post-dose. Recovery of radioactive dose was complete (mean 92.6%); a mean of 79.3% and 13.4% of the dose was recovered in urine and feces, respectively. 3. Three main radioactive peaks were observed in plasma (metabolites M2 A-D, M61, and M63). Intact [(14)C]-nefopam was less than 5% of the total radioactivity in plasma. In urine, the major metabolites were M63, M2 A-D, and M51 which accounted for 22.9%, 9.8%, and 8.1% of the dose, respectively. An unknown entity, M55, was the major metabolite in feces (4.6% of dose). Excretion of unchanged [(14)C]-nefopam was minimal.