AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates interactions between the anticoagulant drug edoxaban and traditional herbal medicines used for stroke, specifically Banhabaekchulcheonmatang (BBCT) and Hwangryeonhaedoktang (HRHDT).
  • - In a clinical trial with healthy Korean volunteers, edoxaban's peak concentrations decreased when taken with BBCT or HRHDT, but the overall exposure (AUC) remained unaffected.
  • - Despite some changes in drug levels, the effectiveness of edoxaban in terms of blood clotting parameters stayed consistent regardless of herbal co-administration, stressing the importance of understanding these interactions in medicine.

Article Abstract

Ethnopharmacological Relevance: Concurrent use of traditional herbal medicines and conventional drugs, particularly for stroke treatment, is widespread, raising concerns about potential drug interactions.

Aim Of The Study: This clinical study aimed to investigate interactions between edoxaban, a direct oral anticoagulant, and two traditional herbal medicines commonly used for stroke: Banhabaekchulcheonmatang (BBCT) and Hwangryeonhaedoktang (HRHDT).

Materials And Methods: Korean healthy volunteers participated in a randomized, open-label, three-period, three-treatment, two-sequence clinical study. Treatments consisted of a single oral dose of edoxaban tablet (60 mg) in the presence or absence of multiple doses of BBCT or HRHDT three times daily for six days. Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic parameters of edoxaban and its active metabolite M4 were assessed following administration of edoxaban alone or in co-administration with BBCT or HRHDT.

Results: When edoxaban was co-administered with BBCT or HRHDT, the area under the curve (AUC) of edoxaban remained unaffected. However, its peak concentrations (C) were decreased by 18.5%-28.1%. Similarly, co-administration of edoxaban with BBCT or HRHDT slightly decreased the AUC of M4 and reduced its C by 16.8%-27.1%. Results revealed that BBCT and HRHDT had a minor impact on pharmacokinetics of edoxaban and M4. Despite alterations in systemic exposures, all pharmacodynamic parameters of edoxaban derived from activated partial thromboplastin time and prothrombin time were equivalent irrespective of herbal medicine co-administration.

Conclusions: These findings contribute to our understanding of potential interactions between conventional anticoagulants and traditional herbal medicines, highlighting the need for comprehensive evaluation in clinical practice.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jep.2024.118997DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates interactions between the anticoagulant drug edoxaban and traditional herbal medicines used for stroke, specifically Banhabaekchulcheonmatang (BBCT) and Hwangryeonhaedoktang (HRHDT).
  • - In a clinical trial with healthy Korean volunteers, edoxaban's peak concentrations decreased when taken with BBCT or HRHDT, but the overall exposure (AUC) remained unaffected.
  • - Despite some changes in drug levels, the effectiveness of edoxaban in terms of blood clotting parameters stayed consistent regardless of herbal co-administration, stressing the importance of understanding these interactions in medicine.
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