BACKGROUND AND PURPOSECholinesterase inhibitors such as neostigmine are used for acute colonic pseudo-obstruction, but cardio-bronchial side-effects limit use. To minimize side-effects, lower doses could be combined with a 5-HT4 receptor agonist, which also facilitates intestinal cholinergic activity. However, safety concerns, especially in the elderly, require drugs with good selectivity of action. These include the AChE inhibitor donepezil (used for Alzheimer's disease, with reduced cardio-bronchial liability) and prucalopride, the first selective, clinically available 5-HT4 receptor agonist. This study examined their individual and potential synergistic activities in human colon.
EXPERIMENTAL APPROACHNeuronally mediated muscle contractions and relaxations of human colon were evoked by electrical field stimulation (EFS) and defined phenotypically as cholinergic, nitrergic or tachykinergic using pharmacological tools; the effects of drugs were determined as changes in 'area under the curve'.
KEY RESULTSPrucalopride increased cholinergically mediated contractions (EC50 855 nM; 33% maximum increase), consistent with its ability to stimulate intestinal motility; donepezil (477%) and neostigmine (2326%) had greater efficacy. Concentrations of donepezil (30-100 nM) found in venous plasma after therapeutic doses had minimal ability to enhance cholinergic activity. However, donepezil (30 nM) together with prucalopride (3, 10 μM) markedly increased EFS-evoked contractions compared with prucalopride alone (P = 0.04). For example, the increases observed with donepezil and prucalopride 10 μM together or alone were, respectively, 105 ± 35%, 4 ± 6% and 35 ± 21% (n = 3-7, each concentration).
CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONSPotential synergy between prucalopride and donepezil activity calls for exploration of this combination as a safer, more effective treatment of colonic pseudo-obstruction.
AbbreviationsAUC, area under the curve; Cmax, peak concentration of drug measured in blood after a single dose; EFS, electrical field stimulation; Emax, maximum response to agonist; GI, gastrointestinal; L-NAME, Nω-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester; NK, neurokinin; TTX, tetrodotoxin
BJP
IntroductionRestoration of normal intestinal motility is a key objective in treatment of a range of acute and chronic digestive motility disorders. In the most common -chronic constipation, laxatives remain the mainstay of pharmacological intervention, although new drugs have recently been introduced. These include prucalopride, a selective 5-HT4 receptor agonist, which facilitates enteric cholinergic and nitrergic activities to promote intestinal motility (Cellek et al., 2006), and lubiprostone and linaclotide, which, respectively, activate chloride type-2 channels and guanylate cyclase type-C receptors to promote defecation primarily by increasing fluid secretion into the lumen (Lembo et al., 2011;Chey et al., 2012). Such breakthroughs have renewed interest in how best to treat other conditions associated with hypomotility and also with acute or chronic small...