Valproic acid (VPA) is mainly metabolized via glucuronide, which is hydrolyzed by β-glucuronidase and undergoes enterohepatic circulation. Amoxicillin/clavulanic acid (AMC) administration leads to decreased levels of β-glucuronidase-producing bacteria, suggesting that these antibiotics could interrupt enterohepatic circulation and thereby alter the pharmacokinetics of VPA. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of AMC on the pharmacokinetics of VPA. This was an open-label, two-treatment, one-sequence study in 16 healthy volunteers. Two treatments were evaluated; treatment VPA, in which a single dose of VPA 500 mg was administered, and treatment AMC + VPA, in which multiple doses of AMC 500/125 mg were administered three times daily for 7 days and then a single dose of VPA was administered. Blood samples were collected up to 48 hours. Pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated using noncompartmental methods. Fifteen subjects completed the study. Systemic exposures and peak concentrations of VPA were slightly lower with treatment AMC + VPA than with treatment VPA (AUClast, 851.0 h·mg/L vs 889.6 h·mg/L; C max, 52.1 mg/L vs 53.0 mg/L). There were no significant between-treatment effects on pharmacokinetics (95% confidence interval [CI]) of AUClast and C max (95.7 [85.9-106.5] and 98.3 [91.6-105.6], respectively). Multiple doses of AMC had no significant effects on the pharmacokinetics of VPA; thus, no dose adjustment is necessary.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/DDDT.S89464 | DOI Listing |
Per Med
December 2024
Department of Neurosurgery, The First Affiliated Hospital of Guizhou University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Guiyang City, Guizhou, China.
Aims: Considerable inter-individual variability in the efficacy of valproic acid (VPA) has been reported, with approximately 20-45% of patients failing to achieve satisfactory seizure control after VPA monotherapy. The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of non-genetic and genetic factors on 12-month VPA-response in a cohort of 194 pediatric patients.
Materials & Methods: Trough concentrations were determined, and a panel of 48 variants located in pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic gene were genotyped.
Front Pharmacol
November 2024
Department of Pharmacy, Beijing Tiantan Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, China.
Our study aims to explore the pharmacokinetics of valproic acid (VPA) in Chinese patients with epilepsy or after neurosurgery and establish a robust population pharmacokinetics (PPK) model. The PPK model was developed using nonlinear mixed-effects modeling, incorporating a total of 615 VPA plasma concentration data points from 443 Chinese epilepsy or after neurosurgery patients. A one-compartment model with an additive residual model was established.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Clin Pharmacol
November 2024
Department of Pharmacy, Minhang Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai, China.
Pharmacogenomics
November 2024
Department of Clinical Pharmacy, General Hospital of Central Theater Command, Wuhan, Hubei Province, 430070, China.
Valproic acid (VPA) is a classic broad-spectrum antiepileptic drug, with significant pharmacokinetic variability. Genetic polymorphisms contribute to this variability, influencing both VPA trough serum concentration (VPA concentration) and VPA-induced liver injury. Our study aims to investigate the association between polymorphisms of uridine diphosphate glucuronyl transferase () , and VPA concentration and screen for potential genetic loci affecting VPA-induced liver injury.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Pharmacokinet
October 2024
Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Department of Medicine, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, USA.
Background And Objective: Valproic acid (VPA) demonstrates nonlinear pharmacokinetics (PK) due to a capacity-limited protein binding, which has potential implications on its total and unbound plasma concentrations, especially during hypoalbuminemia. A physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model was developed to assess the nonlinear dose-exposure relationship of VPA with special emphasis on pediatric patients with hypoalbuminemia.
Methods: A PBPK model was first developed and evaluated in adults using PK-Sim and MoBi (v.
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