The study was undertaken to determine whether cholestyramine (16 g daily) interfered with clofibrate absorption when the two drugs were given together. Fifteen patients taking 1 g of clofibrate twice daily (for 2 to 416 weeks) participated in the study. Clofibrate (as the acid, p-chlorophenoxyisobutyric acid, CPIB) was quantified by thin-layer and gas-liquid chromatography. In patients taking clofibrate only, mean plasma CPIB concentration before the morning dose of clofibrate was 123 mug/ml. Peak levels were reached 3.5 hours after drug intake, the mean peak plasma CPIB concentration being 193 mug/ml. Absorption of CPIB exceeded 99%. Ninety-eight percent of the daily CPIB-intake was excreted in the urine, 61% being conjugated. In vivo degradation of CPIB did not occur. Free and conjugated CPIB was present in bile (mean fasting level being 55 mug/ml. The decay of radioactive CPIB in plasma was not log-linear: the mean t 1/2 of the first exponential was 0.45 hours, and of the second 15.1 hours. The pool size in 3 patients 3 hours after the morning dose of clofibrate was 1054 mg. CPIB was not detectable in adipose tissue, and kinetic data gave no hint of drug accumulation in patients on long-term therapy. In 6 patients given cholestyramine together with clofibrate, there was no significant alteration in fasting plasma CPIB levels, 24-hour urinary and faecal excretion of CPIB or in the half-life and pool size of the drug. A short delay in reaching peak plasma CPIB levels was the only consistent finding.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2362.1975.tb00444.x | DOI Listing |
Br J Clin Pharmacol
December 1987
The Second Department of Internal Medicine, School of Medicine, Chiba University, Japan.
1. The effect of p-chlorophenoxyisobutyrate (CPIB) on glucose metabolism human skin fibroblasts was examined. 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe clofibric acid (CPIB) concentration in the rat blood plasma during 14 days of treatment with clofibrate and after cessation of the treatment, was measured and compared with the changes of some NADP-linked dehydrogenases activity. CPIB rapidly accumulates in the plasma during the first two days of clofibrate administration reaching a maximum concentration of about 0.6 mM.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied the in vivo and in vitro effect of p-chlorophenoxyisobutyrate (CPIB) on insulin binding and glucose transport in isolated rat adipocytes. In the in vitro study, adipocytes were incubated with 1mM of CPIB for 2 h at 37 degrees C, pH 7.4, and then insulin binding (37 degrees C, 60 min) and 3-0-methylglucose transport (37 degrees C, 2s) were measured.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe role of LPL in reducing the serum triacylglycerol concentration was investigated in rats fed a high sucrose diet containing 0.25% (w/w) ethyl-CPIB. Compared with sucrose-fed controls, drug treatment resulted in a fall in adipose tissue LPL activity and a rise in enzyme activity in thigh and heart muscle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA study was designed to investigate the effect of a fatty meal on the absorption of chlorophenoxyisobutyric acid (CPIB) in six healthy adult volunteers after oral administration of the p-chlorophenolic (PCP) ester of CPIB. Plasma concentrations of CPIB when administered with food were higher than those observed in the fasting state. The Cmax in the former case was 24.
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