Kashuba A D, Nafziger A N
Clinical Pharmacology Research Center, Bassett Healthcare, Cooperstown, New York, USA.
Clin Pharmacokinet. 1998 Mar;34(3):203-18. doi: 10.2165/00003088-199834030-00003.
There is an increasing awareness that the exclusion of women from clinical trials may lead to inaccurate application of drug therapy in women. Gender and estrus cycle differences in the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of drugs in animals have been appreciated for over 60 years, but investigation into these differences in humans has only recently occurred. It is postulated that hormonal fluctuations within the menstrual cycle phase may be a primary cause of documented gender differences in the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of drugs. Existing data suggest that menstrual cycle variations do occur in renal, cardiovascular, haematological and immune systems. These physiological changes could potentially impact on the pharmacokinetics or pharmacodynamics of drugs by altering properties, such as protein binding or the volume of distribution, and thereby causing significant effects at various times during the menstrual cycle. However, systematic investigations of physiological variability throughout the menstrual cycle are limited. Fluctuations in symptom severity and clinical course coinciding with the menstrual cycle phase have been seen in some diseases. Hormonal fluctuations within the menstrual cycle have been postulated to cause disease exacerbation. They may also worsen disease severity by impacting on the pharmacokinetics or pharmacodynamics of the medication. Menstrual cycle hormonal changes may influence drug absorption, distribution, metabolism or excretion. In vivo data to demonstrate an effect of endogenous estrogen or progesterone on pharmacokinetics are limited and contradictory. Systematic investigations of specific pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic changes within the menstrual cycle are lacking. Most published studies have been conducted with small numbers of women and a limited numbers of menstrual cycle phases within 1 menstrual cycle. These design problems have resulted in incomplete data for assessing the effects of the menstrual cycle. To date, there are no demonstrated clinically significant changes that occur in the absorption, distribution or elimination of drugs. With respect to drug metabolism, data are exceedingly sparse and have been collected in a suboptimal fashion. Standardisation of study design and analyses in systematic investigations of the influence of the menstrual cycle on drug pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics are needed.
人们越来越意识到,临床试验中排除女性可能导致药物治疗在女性中的应用不准确。60多年来,人们已经认识到动物体内药物的药代动力学和药效学存在性别和发情周期差异,但对人类这些差异的研究直到最近才开始。据推测,月经周期阶段内的激素波动可能是药物药代动力学和药效学中已记录的性别差异的主要原因。现有数据表明,肾脏、心血管、血液和免疫系统确实会出现月经周期变化。这些生理变化可能会通过改变蛋白质结合或分布容积等特性来影响药物的药代动力学或药效学,从而在月经周期的不同时间产生显著影响。然而,对整个月经周期生理变异性的系统研究有限。在一些疾病中,已观察到症状严重程度和临床病程与月经周期阶段一致的波动。月经周期内的激素波动被认为会导致疾病加重。它们还可能通过影响药物的药代动力学或药效学来加重疾病严重程度。月经周期激素变化可能会影响药物的吸收、分布、代谢或排泄。证明内源性雌激素或孕激素对药代动力学有影响的体内数据有限且相互矛盾。缺乏对月经周期内特定药代动力学和药效学变化的系统研究。大多数已发表的研究是在少数女性身上进行的,且在1个月经周期内涉及的月经周期阶段数量有限。这些设计问题导致评估月经周期影响的数据不完整。迄今为止,尚未证明药物的吸收、分布或消除会发生临床上显著的变化。关于药物代谢,数据极其稀少,且收集方式欠佳。需要对月经周期对药物药代动力学和药效学影响的系统研究中的研究设计和分析进行标准化。