2016
DOI: 10.1097/jcp.0000000000000529
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A Pharmacokinetic Study Examining Acetazolamide as a Novel Adherence Marker for Clinical Trials

Abstract: Rationale Accurate assessment of medication adherence is critical for determination of medication efficacy in clinical trials, but most current methods have significant limitations. This study tests a sub-therapeutic (microdose) of acetazolamide as a medication ingestion marker, because acetazolamide is rapidly absorbed and excreted without metabolism in urine and can be non-invasively sampled. Methods In a double-blind, placebo-controlled, residential study, ten volunteers received 15 mg oral acetazolamide … Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…Previously published UKY data demonstrated that ACZ and oxycodone pharmacokinetics are mutually noninteractive when concomitantly administered. 4 Clearly, such a lack of pharmacokinetic interaction between studied medication and adherence marker is essential for any viable adherence marker excipient. The high degree of reproducibility in the ACZ decay curves in all three of the trials conducted to date ( Table 1 and Figure 3b) demonstrates that ACZ output is unaffected by concomitant treatment with cocaine, quinine, doxazosin, modafinil, or oxycodone (please see Figure S1 to compare drug administration protocols in the different cohorts).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Previously published UKY data demonstrated that ACZ and oxycodone pharmacokinetics are mutually noninteractive when concomitantly administered. 4 Clearly, such a lack of pharmacokinetic interaction between studied medication and adherence marker is essential for any viable adherence marker excipient. The high degree of reproducibility in the ACZ decay curves in all three of the trials conducted to date ( Table 1 and Figure 3b) demonstrates that ACZ output is unaffected by concomitant treatment with cocaine, quinine, doxazosin, modafinil, or oxycodone (please see Figure S1 to compare drug administration protocols in the different cohorts).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…3 In 2016, we reported on subtherapeutic (15 mg) acetazolamide (ACZ) doses as a promising noninvasive adherence marker. 4 We used ACZ because it is completely excreted in urine, 5 has been US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved since 1953, and is not physiologically present. It is typically used in doses of 250 and 500 mg twice daily, although in elderly populations it is used to treat congestive heart failure at doses of 125-250 mg/day.…”
Section: Articlementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A schedule of escalating CAM doses (i.e., 5 nmol/kg on days 1 and 2, 50 nmol/kg on days 4 and 6, 100 nmol/kg on days 8 and 10, and 500 nmol/kg from day 12 onward; Supplementary Table S1) was invariably used, because it was found from a systematic analysis of various dosing concentrations and frequencies to yield complete tumor elimination with no apparent toxicity. Analysis of the pharmacokinetic of FITC-folate in both animals and humans has been reported elsewhere (20), and an evaluation of the pharmacokinetics of the PSMA, CA IX, and NK1R ligands has also been reported (21)(22)(23).…”
Section: Analysis Of Antitumor Activity Of Anti-fitc Car T Cells In Vivomentioning
confidence: 99%