Disposition and pharmacokinetics of the antimigraine drug, rizatriptan, in humans

被引:0
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作者
Vyas, KP [1 ]
Halpin, RA [1 ]
Geer, LA [1 ]
Ellis, JD [1 ]
Liu, LD [1 ]
Cheng, HY [1 ]
Chavez-Eng, C [1 ]
Matuszewski, BK [1 ]
Varga, SL [1 ]
Guiblin, AR [1 ]
Rogers, JD [1 ]
机构
[1] Merck & Co Inc, Merck Res Labs, Dept Drug Metab, W Point, PA 19486 USA
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中图分类号
R9 [药学];
学科分类号
1007 ;
摘要
The absorption and disposition of rizatriptan (MK-0462, Maxalt(TM)), a selective 5-HT1B/1D receptor agonist used in the treatment of migraine headaches, was investigated in humans. In a two-period, single i.v. (3 mg, 30-min infusion), and single oral (10 mg) dose study with [C-14]rizatriptan in six healthy human males, total recovery of radioactivity was approximately 94%, with unchanged rizatriptan and its metabolites being excreted mainly in the urine (89% i.v. dose, 82% p.o. dose). Approximately 26 and 14% of i.v. and oral rizatriptan doses, respectively, were excreted in urine as intact parent drug. In a second, high-dose study (60 mg p.o.), five metabolites excreted into urine were identified using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry and NMR methods. They were triazolomethyl-indole-3-acetic acid, rizatriptan-N-10-oxide, 6-hydroxy-rizatriptan, 6-hydroxy-rizatriptan sulfate, and N-10-monodesmethyl-rizatriptan. Urinary excretion of triazolomethyl-indole-3-acetic acid after i.v. and oral administrations of rizatriptan accounted for 35 and 51% of the dose, respectively, whereas the corresponding values for rizatriptan-N-10-oxide were 4 and 2% of the dose. Plasma clearance (CL) and renal clearance (CLr) were 1325 and 349 ml/min, respectively, after i.v. administration. A similar CLr value was obtained after oral administration (396 ml/min). The primary route of rizatriptan elimination occurred via nonrenal route(s) (i.e., metabolism) because the CLr of rizatriptan accounted for 25% of total CL. Furthermore, the CLr was higher than normal glomerular filtration rate (similar to 130 ml/min), indicating that this compound was actively secreted by renal tubules. The absorption of rizatriptan was approximately 90%, but it experienced a moderate first-pass effect, resulting in a bioavailability estimate of 47%.
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页码:89 / 95
页数:7
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