The objective of this study was to determine the disposition and tolerability of 1, 1.5, and 2 g acetaminophen every 6 h for 3 days. Group I healthy adults received acetaminophen (4 then 6 g/day) or placebo; Group II received acetaminophen (4 then 8 g/day) or placebo. Acetaminophen and metabolites were measured in plasma and urine. Hepatic aminotransferases were measured daily. At steady state, acetaminophen concentrations were surprisingly lower than predicted from single-dose data, although sulfate formation clearance (fCL) was lower as expected, indicating cofactor depletion with possible sulfotransferase saturation. In contrast, glucuronide fCL was unexpectedly higher, strongly suggesting glucuronosyltransferase induction. This is the first evidence that acetaminophen induces its own glucuronidation. No dose-dependent differences were detected in fCL of thiol metabolites formed via cytochrome P4502E1. Hepatic aminotransferases stayed within reference ranges, and the incidence and frequency of adverse events were similar for acetaminophen and placebo. Although dose-dependence of acetaminophen disposition was reported previously, this study shows a novel finding of time-dependent disposition during repeated dosing. Unexpected increases in glucuronide fCL more than offset decreases in sulfate fCL, thus increasing acetaminophen clearance overall. Thiol metabolite fCL remained constant up to 8 g/day. These findings have important implications in short-term (3 day) tolerability of supratherapeutic acetaminophen doses in healthy adults.
Background and ObjectivesPhenylephrine HCl 10 mg has been used as a nasal decongestant for over 50 years, yet only limited pharmacokinetic and metabolic data are available. The purpose of this study was to evaluate single-dose pharmacokinetics and safety of phenylephrine HCl 10, 20, and 30 mg and to assess cardiovascular tolerability compared with baseline and placebo in healthy volunteers.MethodsTwenty-eight adults were enrolled in this randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, single-dose, four-treatment crossover study. Subjects remained housed for 6 days to permit time-matched, serial measurements of pulse, blood pressure, and electrocardiograms (ECGs) for baseline and complete treatments on consecutive days. After fasting overnight, subjects were dosed with oral phenylephrine HCl 10, 20, or 30 mg or placebo. Pharmacokinetic blood samples were collected over 7 h, whereas pulse, blood pressure, and ECGs were measured over 12 h. Urine was collected over each 24-h period to quantify phenylephrine and metabolites.ResultsAfter oral administration, phenylephrine was rapidly absorbed with median times to maximum plasma concentrations (tmax) from 0.33 to 0.5 h. For phenylephrine HCl 10, 20, and 30 mg, the mean (standard deviation) maximum concentration (Cmax) was 1354 (954), 2959 (2122), and 4492 (1978) pg/mL, and total systemic exposure [area under the plasma concentration–time curve from time zero to infinity (AUC∞)] was 955.8 (278.5), 2346 (983.8), and 3900 (1764) pg·h/mL, respectively. Both parameters increased disproportionally with increasing dose, as β >1 in the power model. Negligible amounts of phenylephrine and phenylephrine glucuronide were excreted in urine. With increasing dose, percentages by dose of phenylephrine sulfate decreased, whereas percentages of 3-hydroxymandelic acid increased. Eight subjects reported nine mild adverse events; one (somnolence) was deemed to be treatment related. Means of time-matched differences in pulse and blood pressure from baseline showed similar fluctuations over 12 h among phenylephrine HCl doses and placebo, although small differences in systolic pressure were observed during the initial 2 h. No apparent dose-related effects were observed for Fridericia-corrected QT interval (QTcF) values, and individual changes from time-matched baseline (DQTcF).ConclusionsMaximum and total systemic exposures following singe doses of phenylephrine HCl 10, 20, and 30 mg increased disproportionally with increasing dose. Safety and cardiovascular tolerability were comparable among doses and placebo.
Stimulant therapy is the mainstay of treatment for children, adolescents and adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Once-daily, extended-release oral formulations offer long acting control of symptoms by modifying drug delivery and absorption. In particular, consistency in early drug exposure is important for symptom control during school or work hours. Because these once-daily formulations are usually taken in the morning, the timing of the doses with breakfast is important. This study compared the effect of a high-fat breakfast on early drug exposure from a morning dose of two extended-release stimulant formulations: the osmotic-controlled OROS tablet of methylphenidate HCI (CONCERTA) and the capsule containing extended-release beads of mixed amphetamine salts (ADDERALL XR). The study had a single-dose, open-label, randomised, four-treatment, crossover design in which healthy subjects received either 36 mg CONCERTA or 20 mg ADDERALL XR in the morning after an overnight fast or a high-fat breakfast. Serial blood samples were collected over 28h to determine plasma concentrations of methylphenidate and amphetamine. The food effect on early drug exposure and the pharmacokinetic profiles up to 8 h after dosing of the two extended-release stimulants were directly compared using partial area (AUC(p4h), AUC(p6h) and AUC(p8h)) fed/fasted ratios. Amphetamine concentrations were markedly lower when the subjects had eaten breakfast, resulting in lower early drug exposures (p < 0.0001). By contrast, methylphenidate concentrations over the same 8 h were unaffected by breakfast, providing consistent levels of early drug exposure. Therefore, as a child's or adult's eating pattern varies, methylphenidate exposure over the first 8 h would be expected to have less day-to-day variation compared with amphetamine exposure. The osmotic-controlled OROS tablet provides a reliable and consistent delivery of methylphenidate HCI, independent of food, for patients with ADHD.
Background and objective No pediatric patient-reported outcome instruments specific to the common cold are found in the literature. This study involved development and content validity testing of patient-reported outcome items (questions and response options) assessing cold symptoms in children aged 6-11 years. Methods Draft patient-reported outcome instructions, items, response scales, and recall periods were developed based on the literature and existing measures. Qualitative interviews were conducted with children (n = 39) who were currently (n = 31) or had recently (n = 8) experienced a cold and ten parents of a subset of children aged 6-8 years. The interviews were conducted over two rounds and included open-ended concept elicitation questioning, a free-drawing task, a card sorting task, and a task involving circling parts of the body, followed by cognitive debriefing of draft items. Thematic analysis of verbatim transcripts was performed to analyze the qualitative data. The findings were used to support revisions to the draft patient-reported outcome. Results Ten symptom concepts were reported by the children during concept elicitation. The creative tasks helped the children to describe their symptoms, generally using consistent language to do so, irrespective of age. Nineteen patient-reported outcome items were developed and subject to cognitive debriefing. Debriefing with both children and parents informed several small revisions and provided evidence that the majority of children found most patient-reported outcome items easy to understand, and that the items were mainly interpreted consistently and as intended. Conclusions This in-depth qualitative study has supported identification of relevant symptom concepts and the development and refinement of patient-reported outcome items to assess those concepts. The findings support the content validity of the items and suggest that they can be used with confidence in children aged 9 years and older. For children aged 6-8 years, it is recommended the items are administered with initial adult supervision to explain the more difficult concepts or through parent/interviewer administration.
In a multiple-dose pharmacokinetics study of 4, 6, and 8 g/d of acetaminophen for 3 days, multiple aminotransferase determinations demonstrated no clinically important elevations at 1, 1.5, or 2 times the maximum recommended acetaminophen dose.
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