Bullingham R E, Nicholls A J, Kamm B R
CS Associates, Palo Alto, California, USA.
Clin Pharmacokinet. 1998 Jun;34(6):429-55. doi: 10.2165/00003088-199834060-00002.
The pharmacokinetics of the immunosuppressant mycophenolate mofetil have been investigated in healthy volunteers and mainly in recipients of renal allografts. Following oral administration, mycophenolate mofetil was rapidly and completely absorbed, and underwent extensive presystemic de-esterification. Systemic plasma clearance of intravenous mycophenolate mofetil was around 10 L/min in healthy individuals, and plasma mycophenolate mofetil concentrations fell below the quantitation limit (0.4 mg/L) within 10 minutes of the cessation of infusion. Similar plasma mycophenolate mofetil concentrations were seen after intravenous administration in patients with severe renal or hepatic impairment, implying that the de-esterification process had not been substantially affected. Mycophenolic acid, the active immunosuppressant species, is glucuronidated to a stable phenolic glucuronide (MPAG) which is not pharmacologically active. Over 90% of the administered dose is eventually excreted in the urine, mostly as MPAG. The magnitude of the MPAG renal clearance indicates that active tubular secretion of MPAG must occur. At clinically relevant concentrations, mycophenolic acid and MPAG are about 97% and 82% bound to albumin, respectively. MPAG at high (but clinically realisable) concentrations reduced the plasma binding of mycophenolic acid. The mean maximum plasma mycophenolic acid concentration (Cmax) after a mycophenolate mofetil 1 g dose in healthy individuals was around 25 mg/L, occurred at 0.8 hours postdose, decayed with a mean apparent half-life (t1/2) of around 16 hours, and generated a mean total area under the plasma concentration-time curve (AUC infinity) of around 64 mg.h/L. Intra- and interindividual coefficients of variation for the AUC infinity of the drug were estimated to be 25% and 10%, respectively. Intravenous and oral administration of mycophenolate mofetil showed statistically equivalent MPA AUC infinity values in healthy individuals. Compared with mycophenolic acid, MPAG showed a roughly similar Cmax about 1 hour after mycophenolic acid Cmax, with a similar t1/2 and an AUC infinity about 5-fold larger than that for mycophenolic acid. Secondary mycophenolic acid peaks represent a significant enterohepatic cycling process. Since MPAG was the sole material excreted in bile, entrohepatic cycling must involve colonic bacterial deconjugation of MPAG. An oral cholestyramine interaction study showed that the mean contribution of entrohepatic cycling to the AUC infinity of mycophenolic acid was around 40% with a range of 10 to 60%. The pharmacokinetics of patients with renal transplants (after 3 months or more) compared with those of healthy individuals were similar after oral mycophenolate mofetil. Immediately post-transplant, the mean Cmax and AUC infinity of mycophenolic acid were 30 to 50% of those in the 3-month post-transplant patients. These parameters rose slowly over the 3-month interval. Slow metabolic changes, rather than poor absorption, seem responsible for this nonstationarity, since intravenous and oral administration of mycophenolate mofetil in the immediate post-transplant period generated comparable MPA AUC infinity values. Renal impairment had no major effect on the pharmacokinetic of mycophenolic acid after single doses of mycophenolate mofetil, but there was a progressive decrease in MPAG clearance as glomerular filtration rate (GFR) declined. Compared to individuals with a normal GFR, patients with severe renal impairment (GFR 1.5 L/h/1.73m2) showed 3-to 6-fold higher MPAG AUC values. In rental transplant recipients during acute renal impairment in the early post-transplant period, the plasma MPA concentrations were comparable to those in patients without renal failure, whereas plasma MPAG concentrations were 2- to 3-fold higher. Haemodialysis had no major effect on plasma mycophenolic acid or MPAG. Dosage adjustments appear to not be necessary either in renal impairment or during dialysis. (ABSTRACT TRUN
免疫抑制剂霉酚酸酯的药代动力学已在健康志愿者中进行了研究,主要是在同种异体肾移植受者中。口服给药后,霉酚酸酯迅速且完全吸收,并经历广泛的首过脱酯作用。健康个体静脉注射霉酚酸酯的全身血浆清除率约为10 L/分钟,停止输注后10分钟内血浆霉酚酸酯浓度降至定量限(0.4 mg/L)以下。严重肾或肝功能损害患者静脉给药后血浆霉酚酸酯浓度相似,这意味着脱酯过程未受到实质性影响。活性免疫抑制物质霉酚酸被葡萄糖醛酸化形成稳定的酚性葡萄糖醛酸酯(MPAG),其无药理活性。超过90%的给药剂量最终经尿液排泄,主要以MPAG形式排出。MPAG肾清除率的大小表明MPAG必然存在主动肾小管分泌。在临床相关浓度下,霉酚酸和MPAG分别约97%和82%与白蛋白结合。高浓度(但临床可实现)的MPAG降低了霉酚酸的血浆结合率。健康个体单次服用1 g霉酚酸酯后,血浆霉酚酸的平均最大浓度(Cmax)约为25 mg/L,在给药后0.8小时出现,平均表观半衰期(t1/2)约为16小时,血浆浓度-时间曲线下的平均总面积(AUC无穷大)约为64 mg·h/L。该药物AUC无穷大的个体内和个体间变异系数估计分别为25%和10%。健康个体静脉和口服霉酚酸酯的MPA AUC无穷大值在统计学上等效。与霉酚酸相比,MPAG在霉酚酸Cmax后约1小时出现大致相似的Cmax,t1/2相似,AUC无穷大比霉酚酸大5倍左右。霉酚酸的次级峰代表显著的肠肝循环过程。由于MPAG是胆汁中唯一排泄的物质,肠肝循环必然涉及MPAG的结肠细菌去结合。一项口服消胆胺相互作用研究表明,肠肝循环对霉酚酸AUC无穷大的平均贡献约为40%,范围为10%至60%。肾移植患者(3个月或更长时间后)口服霉酚酸酯后的药代动力学与健康个体相似。移植后即刻,霉酚酸的平均Cmax和AUC无穷大是移植后3个月患者的30%至50%。这些参数在3个月期间缓慢上升。这种非平稳性似乎是由缓慢的代谢变化而非吸收不良引起的,因为移植后即刻静脉和口服霉酚酸酯产生的MPA AUC无穷大值相当。单剂量霉酚酸酯后,肾功能损害对霉酚酸的药代动力学无重大影响,但随着肾小球滤过率(GFR)下降,MPAG清除率逐渐降低。与GFR正常的个体相比,严重肾功能损害患者(GFR<15 mL/min/1.73m²)的MPAG AUC值高3至6倍。在肾移植受者移植后早期急性肾功能损害期间,血浆MPA浓度与无肾衰竭患者相当,而血浆MPAG浓度高2至3倍。血液透析对血浆霉酚酸或MPAG无重大影响。肾功能损害或透析期间似乎无需调整剂量。(摘要截断)