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Xenobiotica
the fate of foreign compounds in biological systems
Volume 48, 2018 - Issue 7
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Animal Pharmacokinetics and Metabolism

Effects of aging and rifampicin pretreatment on the pharmacokinetics of human cytochrome P450 probes caffeine, warfarin, omeprazole, metoprolol and midazolam in common marmosets genotyped for cytochrome P450 2C19

, , , , , , , , & show all
Pages 720-726 | Received 31 May 2017, Accepted 06 Jul 2017, Published online: 25 Jul 2017
 

Abstract

1. The pharmacokinetics were investigated for human cytochrome P450 probes after single intravenous and oral administrations of 0.20 and 1.0 mg/kg, respectively, of caffeine, warfarin, omeprazole, metoprolol and midazolam to aged (10–14 years old, n = 4) or rifampicin-treated/young (3 years old, n = 3) male common marmosets all genotyped as heterozygous for a cytochrome P450 2C19 variant.

2. Slopes of the plasma concentration–time curves after intravenous administration of warfarin and midazolam were slightly, but significantly (two-way analysis of variance), decreased in aged marmosets compared with young marmosets. The mean hepatic clearances determined by in silico fitting for individual pharmacokinetic models of warfarin and midazolam in the aged group were, respectively, 23% and 56% smaller than those for the young group.

3. Significantly enhanced plasma clearances of caffeine, warfarin, omeprazole and midazolam were evident in young marmosets pretreated with rifampicin (25 mg/kg daily for 4 days). Two- to three-fold increases in hepatic intrinsic clearance values were observed in the individual pharmacokinetic models.

4. The in vivo dispositions of multiple simultaneously administered drugs in old, young and P450-enzyme-induced marmosets were elucidated. The results suggest that common marmosets could be experimental models for aged, induced or polymorphic P450 enzymes in P450-dependent drug metabolism studies.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Norie Murayama and Tomonori Miura for their support of this study and David Smallbones for his advice on English language usage.

Declaration of interest

This work resulted from the “Construction of System for Spread of Primate Model Animals” initiative under the Strategic Research Program for Brain Sciences of the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development. The authors alone are responsible for the content and for writing the article and report no declarations of interest.

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