MacFadyen R J, Meredith P A, Elliott H L
Department of Medicine and Therapeutics, Gardiner Institute, Western Infirmary, Glasgow, Scotland.
Clin Pharmacokinet. 1993 Oct;25(4):274-82. doi: 10.2165/00003088-199325040-00003.
The conventional pharmacokinetic profile of the angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor, enalapril, is a lipid-soluble and relatively inactive prodrug with good oral absorption (60 to 70%), a rapid peak plasma concentration (1 hour) and rapid clearance (undetectable by 4 hours) by de-esterification in the liver to a primary active diacid metabolite, enalaprilat. Peak plasma enalaprilat concentrations occur 2 to 4 hours after oral enalapril administration. Elimination thereafter is biphasic, with an initial phase which reflects renal filtration (elimination half-life 2 to 6 hours) and a subsequent prolonged phase (elimination half-life 36 hours), the latter representing equilibration of drug from tissue distribution sites. The prolonged phase does not contribute to drug accumulation on repeated administration but is thought to be of pharmacological significance in mediating drug effects. Renal impairment [particularly creatinine clearance < 20 ml/min (< 1.2 L/h)] results in significant accumulation of enalaprilat and necessitates dosage reduction. Accumulation is probably the cause of reduced elimination in healthy elderly individuals and in patients with concomitant diabetes, hypertension and heart failure. Conventional pharmacokinetic approaches have recently been extended by more detailed descriptions of the nonlinear binding of enalaprilat to ACE in plasma and tissue sites. As a result of these new approaches, there have been significant improvements in the characterisation of concentration-time profiles for single-dose administration and the translation to steady-state. Such improvements have further importance for the accurate integration of the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic responses to enalapril(at) in a concentration-effect model.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
血管紧张素转换酶(ACE)抑制剂依那普利的传统药代动力学特征为:它是一种脂溶性且相对无活性的前体药物,口服吸收良好(60%至70%),血浆浓度迅速达到峰值(1小时),并通过在肝脏中脱酯作用迅速清除(4小时后检测不到),转化为主要活性二酸代谢产物依那普利拉。口服依那普利后2至4小时出现血浆依那普利拉浓度峰值。此后消除呈双相,初始阶段反映肾滤过(消除半衰期2至6小时),随后是延长阶段(消除半衰期36小时),后者代表药物从组织分布部位的平衡。延长阶段在重复给药时不会导致药物蓄积,但被认为在介导药物作用方面具有药理学意义。肾功能损害[尤其是肌酐清除率<20 ml/min(<1.2 L/h)]会导致依那普利拉显著蓄积,因此需要减少剂量。蓄积可能是健康老年人以及伴有糖尿病、高血压和心力衰竭患者消除减少的原因。最近,传统药代动力学方法通过更详细描述依那普利拉在血浆和组织部位与ACE的非线性结合而得到扩展。由于这些新方法,单剂量给药浓度-时间曲线的表征以及向稳态的转化有了显著改善。这些改进对于在浓度-效应模型中准确整合依那普利(拉)的药代动力学和药效学反应具有更重要的意义。(摘要截断于250字)