UNLABELLED: The objective of the study was to investigate the effect of two different breakfasts on the pharmacokinetics of nelfinavir under steady state conditions. METHODS:Twenty-four healthy male volunteers were evaluated in a 17 days open labeled one sequence crossover study evaluating the effect of a 'light' breakfast (350 kcal) compared to a standard breakfast (800 kcal) on the pharmacokinetics of nelfinavir at steady state during 1250 mg twice daily (BID) administration. RESULTS: After administration with a standard breakfast higher concentrations of nelfinavir were observed during the terminal phase than after administration with a 'light' breakfast. The comparison of the log subset 10 transformed parameters C subset 1-hr-postdose, AUC subset 0-12h, C subset max, and C subset 12 hours, showed that the AUC subset 0-12h was decreased by 13% (P = 0.01) after administration with the 'light' breakfast. Nelfinavir 1250 mg BID was well tolerated. CONCLUSIONS: Although drug intake with a 'light' breakfast' showed a statistically significant decrease for nelfinavir AUC subset 0-12h, this marginal 13% reduction is not considered clinically relevant. No significant effects of the two different breakfasts were found for the remaining three parameters tested C subset 1-hr-postdose, C subset max, and C subset 12 hours.
RCT Entities:
UNLABELLED: The objective of the study was to investigate the effect of two different breakfasts on the pharmacokinetics of nelfinavir under steady state conditions. METHODS: Twenty-four healthy male volunteers were evaluated in a 17 days open labeled one sequence crossover study evaluating the effect of a 'light' breakfast (350 kcal) compared to a standard breakfast (800 kcal) on the pharmacokinetics of nelfinavir at steady state during 1250 mg twice daily (BID) administration. RESULTS: After administration with a standard breakfast higher concentrations of nelfinavir were observed during the terminal phase than after administration with a 'light' breakfast. The comparison of the log subset 10 transformed parameters C subset 1-hr-postdose, AUC subset 0-12h, C subset max, and C subset 12 hours, showed that the AUC subset 0-12h was decreased by 13% (P = 0.01) after administration with the 'light' breakfast. Nelfinavir 1250 mg BID was well tolerated. CONCLUSIONS: Although drug intake with a 'light' breakfast' showed a statistically significant decrease for nelfinavir AUC subset 0-12h, this marginal 13% reduction is not considered clinically relevant. No significant effects of the two different breakfasts were found for the remaining three parameters tested C subset 1-hr-postdose, C subset max, and C subset 12 hours.