The pharmacokinetics of the antipsychotic agent risperidone were investigated in healthy young and elderly subjects, cirrhotic patients and patients with moderate and severe renal insufficiency. In a comparative trial, a single oral 1-mg dose was administered to fasting subjects. Plasma and urine concentrations of the parent compound risperidone and the active moiety (i.e. risperidone plus 9-hydroxy-risperidone) were measured by radioimmunoassays. No or only small changes in plasma protein binding were observed in hepatic and renal disease, whereas the protein binding was not influenced by aging. The inter-individual variability in plasma concentrations of the active moiety was much less than the variability in plasma concentrations of risperidone. Three out of six subjects, behaving like poor metabolizers, were on medication (thiethylperazine, amitriptyline, metoprolol) that may inhibit risperidone metabolism by CYP2D6 (debrisoquine 4-hydroxylase). The pharmacokinetics of risperidone in elderly and cirrhotic patients were comparable to those in young subjects, whereas total oral clearance was reduced in renal disease patients. The elimination rate and clearance of 9-hydroxy-risperidone was reduced in elderly and renal disease patients because of a diminished creatinine clearance. The CL(oral) of the active moiety, which is primarily 9-hydroxy-risperidone, was reduced by about 30% in the elderly and by about 50% in renal disease patients. In addition, the t1/2 of the active moiety was prolonged (19 h in young subjects versus about 25 h in elderly and renal disease patients). Based upon the pharmacokinetics of the active moiety, a dose reduction and a cautious dose titration is advised in the elderly and in patients with renal disease. In cirrhotic patients, the single-dose pharmacokinetics were comparable to those in healthy young subjects.
The objective of this study was to determine the effects of renal dysfunction on the steady-state pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of atorvastatin, a 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitor. Nineteen subjects with calculated creatinine clearances ranging from 13 mL/min to 143 mL/min were administered 10 mg atorvastatin daily for 2 weeks. Pharmacokinetic parameters and lipid responses were analyzed by regression on calculated creatinine clearance. Correlations between steady-state atorvastatin pharmacokinetic or pharmacodynamic parameters and creatinine clearance were weak and, in general, did not achieve statistical significance. Although the elimination rate constant, lambda z (0.579), was significantly correlated with creatinine clearance, neither maximum plasma concentration (Cmax, -0.361) nor oral clearance (Cl/F, 0.306) were; thus, steady-state exposure is not altered. Renal impairment has no significant effect on pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics of atorvastatin.
Replacement therapy for hemophilia B (factor IX deficiency) using prothrombin complex concentrate (PCC) has been associated with serious complications of thromboembolic events and transmission of viral infections. Monoclonal antibody-purified factor IX (Mononine) provides a highly purified factor IX concentrate, while eliminating other vitamin K-dependent factors (II, VII, and X). Mononine was evaluated for in vivo recovery, half-life, and for its safety and efficacy in 10 patients with hemophilia B. The in vivo recovery of factor IX with Mononine was a 0.67 +/- 0.14 U/dL (mean +/- SD) increase per 1U/kg of infused factor IX, and the biologic half-life (t1/2), determined using the terminal phase of elimination, was 22.6 +/- 8.1 hours. Comparison of in vivo recovery of other vitamin K-dependent factors following a single infusion of either Mononine or PCC showed that, whereas Mononine infusion caused no changes in other vitamin K-dependent factors or in prothrombin activation fragment (F1+2), PCC infusion was associated with significant increases of factors II (2.7 U/dL per 1 U/dL of IX increase) and X (2.2 U/dL for 1 U/dL for 1 U/dL of IX). Patients who used Mononine as their sole therapeutic material during the 12-month period showed an excellent response in hemostasis for their bleeding episodes. Their experience with long-term use of Mononine was at least equivalent to their previous experience with PCC in the frequency and amount of factor usage. No patients developed antibody against mouse IgG or an increase in IX inhibitor during the 12-month period. These results indicate that monoclonal antibody-purified factor IX concentrate provides hemostatically effective factor IX replacement while avoiding extraneous thrombogenic substances.
Renal dysfunction did not cause significant accumulations of PTF or M-I after multiple bid and tid dosing, however, M-IV and M-V had significant accumulation in patients with renal impairment. Dosage reduction to 400 mg bid for patients with moderate renal impairment and 200-400 mg/d for severe renal impairment, as well as close clinical monitoring, seem prudent until the complex pharmacologic interactions of PTF and its metabolites can be further delineated.
Aims To assess whether renal impairment in¯uences the pharmacokinetics of ziprasidone, and to determine whether ziprasidone is cleared via haemodialysis. Methods Thirty-nine subjects with varying degrees of renal impairment were enrolled into an open-label, multicentre, multiple-dose study and assigned to four groups according to their renal function: normal (group 1, creatinine clearance >70 ml min x 1 ); mildly impaired (group 2, creatinine clearance 30±60 ml min x 1 ); moderately impaired (group 3, creatinine clearance 10±29 ml min x 1 ), and severely impaired (group 4, requiring haemodialysis three times-a-week). Subjects received ziprasidone 40 mg day x 1 , given orally with food, as two divided daily doses for 7 days and a single 20 mg dose on the morning of day 8. Pharmacokinetic variables were determined from multiple venous blood samples collected on days 1 and 8 (haemodialysis day for subjects with severe renal impairment). Additional samples were collected from subjects with severe renal impairment on day 7 (nonhaemodialysis day). Results On day 1 there were no statistically signi®cant differences in the pharmacokinetics (AUC(0,12 h), C max , t max ) of ziprasidone among subjects with normal renal function and those with mild, moderate and severe renal impairment. The AUC(0,12 h) and C max in subjects with mildly impaired renal function were statistically signi®cantly greater than in those with moderately impaired renal function (P=0.0163±0.0385). The mean AUC(0,12 h) was 272, 370, 250 and 297 ng ml x1 h in groups 1, 2, 3 and 4, respectively. Corresponding mean C max values were 47, 61, 41 and 50 ng ml x 1 and corresponding mean t max values were 5, 6, 5 and 5 h. On day 8 there were no statistically signi®cant differences in the pharmacokinetics (AUC(0,12 h), C max , t max , l z , Fb) of ziprasidone among subjects with normal renal function and those with moderate or severe renal impairment. The AUC(0,12 h) in subjects with mild renal impairment was statistically signi®cantly greater than those in the other three groups (P=0.0025±0.0221), but this was not considered clinically signi®cant. The mean AUC(0,12 h) were 446, 650, 389 and 427 ng ml x 1 h in groups 1, 2, 3 and 4, respectively. Corresponding mean C max values were 68, 93, 54 and 70 ng ml , corresponding mean t max values were 4, 5, 4 and 5 h and corresponding mean l z were 0.14, 0.11, 0.14 and 0.17 h x 1 . The mean percentage Fb was 99.84± 99.88% across all groups and the mean t K,z ranged from 4.2 to 6.4 h. Comparison of the mean AUC(0,12 h) and C max values in subjects with severe renal impairment on day 7 with those on day 8 suggested that haemodialysis does not have a clinically signi®cant effect on the pharmacokinetics of ziprasidone. Conclusions The ®ndings of this study indicate that mild-to-moderate impairment of renal function does not result in clinically signi®cant alteration of ziprasidone pharmacokinetics and therefore does not necessitate dose adjustment.
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