Urinary valproic acid (VPA) and VPA metabolite profiles were determined before (day 1) and after (day 2) the administration of antipyretic doses of acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) to seven subjects with steady-state levels of VPA. Of the 13 metabolites assayed by GC/MS, levels of (E)-2-ene VPA and 3-keto VPA were significantly decreased on day 2, whereas those of the VPA conjugates (glucuronide) and 4-ene VPA were significantly increased. The beta-oxidation pathway consisting of (E)-2-ene VPA, 3-OH VPA, and 3-keto VPA was decreased from 24.5% +/- 10.3% of total metabolites excreted on day 1 to 8.3% +/- 4.2% on day 2, a decrease of 66% (P less than 0.05). VPA glucuronide content increased from 50.5% +/- 12.6% on day 1 to 65.5% +/- 14% of total excreted on day 2, an increase of 30% (P less than 0.05). The day 2/day 1 ratios of VPA glucuronide correlated significantly with the day 2/day 1 ratios of VPA mean free fraction (r = 0.9424; P = 0.005) in six of the seven subjects. Inhibition of VPA beta-oxidation by salicylate was sufficient to counterbalance the increased elimination of VPA as its conjugates and explains why total clearance of VPA after salicylate remains unchanged even though the free fraction of VPA is increased. Metabolic profiles indicate that salicylate likely inhibits VPA beta-oxidation by reducing valproyl-coenzyme A formation.
In five of six epileptic children who were taking 18 to 49 mg/kg/day valproic acid (VPA), the steady-state serum free fractions of VPA rose from 12% to 43% when antipyretic doses of aspirin were also taken. Mean total VPA half-life (t1/2) rose from 10.4 +/- 2.7 to 12.9 +/- 1.8 hr and mean free VPA t1/2 rose from 6.7 +/- to 2.1 to 8.9 +2- 3.0 hr when salicylate was present in the serum. The in vitro albumin binding association constant (ka) for VPA was decreased by salicylate, but the in vivo ka value was not affected. The 12-hr (trough) concentrations of both free and total VPA were higher in the presence of serum salicylate in five of six patients. Renal excretion of unchanged VPA decreased in five of six patients, but the VPA carboxyl conjugate metabolite-excretion patterns were not consistently affected. Salicylate appeared to displace VPA from serum albumin in vivo, but the increased VPA t1/2 and changes in VPA elimination patterns suggest that serum salicylate also altered VPA metabolism.
ABSTRACT:The relationships between total and free serum valproate (VPA) concentrations and seizure control, serum liver enzyme activity and plasma ammonia concentration were studied in 61 epileptic children. Enzymeimmunoassay (EMIT)R methods gave higher values of total VPA concentration than gas-liquid chromatography (GLC) methods. In over 80% of children with complete seizure control the ranges of total VPA concentration were 140-420 umol/L with GLC methods and 210-560 umol/L with EMIT methods. The range of free VPA concentrations in 78% of children with complete seizure control was 8.8-26.4 umol/L. Increased liver enzyme activity was observed in 6 of the 61 children and raised plasma ammonia concentration in 11 of 50 children. Plasma ammonia concentration was related to total serum VPA but was not related to free serum VPA. Increased serum liver enzyme activity was related to VPA dose per kg but not to free or total serum VPA concentration. Thus free VPA concentrations do not appear to be more useful than total VPA concentrations in predicting seizure control and do not correlate with liver enzyme activity or plasma ammonia concentration.
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