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Xenobiotica
the fate of foreign compounds in biological systems
Volume 23, 1993 - Issue 11
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Research Article

Metabolism and enantioselective pharmacokinetics of Casodex in man

, , , , &
Pages 1241-1253 | Received 04 Nov 1992, Accepted 03 May 1993, Published online: 22 Sep 2008
 

Abstract

1. Five healthy male volunteers received a single oral dose (50 mg; 42μCi) of 14C-Casodex, a racemic compound, which has its antiandrogen activity predominantly in R-Casodex, the (-)-enantiomer, with little activity in S-Casodex, the (+)-enantiomer.

2. Plasma concentrations of R-Casodex increased slowly in all subjects to reach a peak of 559-970ng/ml between 15 and 48h after dosing and, thereafter, declined mono-exponentially with a mean half-life of 4.2 days. Plasma concentrations of S-Casodex rose rapidly to reach a peak of 32-66ng/ml within the first 2-5h, and then declined monoexponentially with a mean half-life of 19h. Plasma concentrations of the racemate were in very good agreement with the sum of the enantiomer concentrations throughout the study and were very similar to concentrations of total radioactivity over the first 4 days.

3. About 80% of the radioactive dose was recovered in urine (35.8±1.7%; mean SElingM) and faeces (42.6±2.9%) during a total collection over 9 days; this incomplete recovery was consistent with the slow elimination of R-Casodex.

4. T.l.c. of urine extracts indicated extensive metabolism of Casodex to two polar metabolites identified as the glucuronide conjugates of Casodex and hydroxy-Casodex; almost no parent compound was observed. Virtually all of the Casodex glucuronide excreted in urine during the first 2 days was derived from S-Casodex, consistent with the relatively low plasma concentrations and rapid elimination of this enantiomer.

5. T.l.c. of faecal extracts showed the presence of both Casodex and hydroxy-Casodex; these may have been eliminated in bile as the glucuronide conjugates, with subsequent hydrolysis in the intestinal tract.

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