Morse G D, Fischl M A, Shelton M J, Borin M T, Driver M R, DeRemer M, Lee K, Wajszczuk C P
Department of Pharmacy Practice, State University of New York at Buffalo, Amherst, NY 14260, USA.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 1996 Mar;40(3):767-71. doi: 10.1128/AAC.40.3.767.
Atevirdine is a nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor with in vitro activity against human immunodeficiency virus type 1 and is currently in phase II clinical trials. Atevirdine is most soluble at a pH of < 2, and therefore, normal gastric acidity is most likely necessary for optimal bioavailability. Because of the rapid development of resistance in vitro, atevirdine is being evaluated in combination with didanosine and/or zidovudine in both two- and three-drug combination regimens. To examine the influence of concurrent didanosine (buffered tablet formulation) on the disposition of atevirdine, 12 human immunodeficiency virus type 1-infected subjects (mean CD4+ cell count, 199 cells per mm3; range, 13 to 447 cells/mm3) participated in a three-way, partially randomized, crossover, single-dose study to evaluate the pharmacokinetics of didanosine and atevirdine when each drug was given alone (treatments A and B, respectively) versus concurrently (treatment C). Concurrent administration of didanosine and atevirdine significantly reduced the maximum concentration of atevirdine in serum from 3.45 +/- 2.8 to 0.854 +/- 0.33 microM (P = 0.004). Likewise, the mean atevirdine area under the concentration-time curve from 0 to 24 h after administration of the combination was reduced to 6.47 +/- 2.2 microM.h (P = 0.004) relative to a value of 11.3 +/- 4.8 microM.h for atevirdine alone. Atevirdine had no statistically significant effect on the pharmacokinetic parameters of didanosine. Concurrent administration of single doses of atevirdine and didanosine resulted in a markedly lower maximum concentration of atevirdine in serum and area under the concentration-time curve, with a minimal effect on the disposition of didanosine. It is unknown whether an interaction of similar magnitude would occur under steady-state conditions; thus, combination regimens which include both atevirdine and didanosine should be designed so that their administration times are separated. Since the duration of the buffering effect of didanosine formulations is unknown, atevirdine should be given prior to didanosine.
阿特韦定是一种非核苷类逆转录酶抑制剂,具有体外抗1型人类免疫缺陷病毒的活性,目前正处于II期临床试验阶段。阿特韦定在pH值小于2时溶解度最高,因此,正常胃酸度对于最佳生物利用度很可能是必需的。由于体外耐药性发展迅速,阿特韦定正在与去羟肌苷和/或齐多夫定联合用于二联和三联药物联合治疗方案中进行评估。为了研究同时服用去羟肌苷(缓冲片剂剂型)对阿特韦定处置的影响,12名1型人类免疫缺陷病毒感染受试者(平均CD4 +细胞计数为每立方毫米199个细胞;范围为13至447个细胞/立方毫米)参与了一项三向、部分随机、交叉、单剂量研究,以评估去羟肌苷和阿特韦定单独给药(分别为治疗A和B)与同时给药(治疗C)时的药代动力学。同时给予去羟肌苷和阿特韦定显著降低了血清中阿特韦定的最大浓度,从3.45±2.8降至0.854±0.33微摩尔/升(P = 0.004)。同样,联合给药后0至24小时阿特韦定浓度-时间曲线下的平均面积相对于单独使用阿特韦定的11.3±4.8微摩尔·小时的值降至6.47±2.2微摩尔·小时(P = 0.004)。阿特韦定对去羟肌苷的药代动力学参数没有统计学上的显著影响。同时给予单剂量的阿特韦定和去羟肌苷导致血清中阿特韦定的最大浓度和浓度-时间曲线下面积显著降低,对去羟肌苷的处置影响最小。在稳态条件下是否会发生类似程度的相互作用尚不清楚;因此,设计包含阿特韦定和去羟肌苷的联合治疗方案时,应使它们的给药时间分开。由于去羟肌苷制剂的缓冲作用持续时间未知,阿特韦定应在去羟肌苷之前给药。