Literature DB >> 17061962

A comparison of the steady-state pharmacokinetics of nevirapine in men, nonpregnant women and women in late pregnancy.

Nils von Hentig1, Amina Carlebach, Peter Gute, Gaby Knecht, Stefan Klauke, Maren Rohrbacher, Hartmut Stocker, Michael Kurowski, Sebastian Harder, Schlomo Staszewski, Annette Haberl.   

Abstract

AIMS: To evaluate the pharmacokinetics of nevirapine and any possible influencing factors in pregnant women (n = 16), nonpregnant women (n = 13) and men (n = 14), who received nevirapine 200 mg twice daily together with nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors.
METHODS: Blood samples were taken for 12 h at steady state. Nevirapine concentrations were measured by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. The influence of gender, age, body weight and comedication on minimum and maximum concentrations (C(min), C(max)), area under the concentration-time curve (AUC), total clearance (CL(tot)), half-life (t(1/2)) and volume of distribution (V(d)) was analysed by multivariate techniques.
RESULTS: Mean [95% confidence interval (CI)]C(max), AUC(ss) and clearance were 5221 ng ml(-1) (4267, 6175), 50 789 ng (-1)h ml(-1) (43 453, 58 125) and 69.9 ml min(-1) for men, 5871 ng ml(-1) (4848, 6895), 57 045 ng h(-1) ml(-1) (45 997, 68 093) and 65.6 ml min(-1) for nonpregnant women and 4505 ng ml(-1) (3644, 5366), 44 579 ng h(-1) ml(-1) (36 564, 52 594) and 82.1 ml min(-1) for pregnant women. The differences between pregnant and nonpregnant women (% difference, 95% CI) in C(max) (-30.3; -28.5, -33.0), AUC(ss) (-28.0; - 25.8, - 29.5) and clearance (20.2; 26.6, 15.6) reached statistical significance (P = 0.010, P = 0.028 and P = 0.028, respectively). The multivariate analysis underscored the influence of bodyweight on the plasma exposure to nevirapine.
CONCLUSIONS: Pregnant women exhibited an increased nevirapine clearance and comparably low plasma concentrations, whereas women with a low bodyweight achieved high plasma nevirapine concentrations. The large variability in nevirapine concentrations in women may lead to loss of efficacy and viral resistance, or drug toxicity, and therefore these patients should be monitored frequently.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17061962      PMCID: PMC1885176          DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2125.2006.02664.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Clin Pharmacol        ISSN: 0306-5251            Impact factor:   4.335


  28 in total

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8.  Pregnancy-induced increase in metoprolol metabolism.

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10.  Disposition of carbamazepine and phenytoin in pregnancy.

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2.  Persistent high nevirapine blood level with DRESS syndrome 12 days after interruption of antiretroviral therapy.

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3.  Suboptimal nevirapine steady-state pharmacokinetics during intrapartum compared with postpartum in HIV-1-seropositive Ugandan women.

Authors:  Mohammed Lamorde; Pauline Byakika-Kibwika; Violet Okaba-Kayom; John P Flaherty; Marta Boffito; Rhoda Namakula; Mairin Ryan; Clemensia Nakabiito; David J Back; Saye Khoo; Concepta Merry; Kimberly K Scarsi
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5.  Postpartum antiretroviral drug resistance in HIV-1-infected women receiving pregnancy-limited antiretroviral therapy.

Authors:  Roger Paredes; Irene Cheng; Daniel R Kuritzkes; Ruth E Tuomala
Journal:  AIDS       Date:  2010-01-02       Impact factor: 4.177

6.  Pharmacokinetic interaction between nevirapine and nortriptyline in rats: inhibition of nevirapine metabolism by nortriptyline.

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7.  Validation and clinical application of a method to quantify nevirapine in dried blood spots and dried breast-milk spots.

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8.  Comparison of nevirapine plasma concentrations between lead-in and steady-state periods in Chinese HIV-infected patients.

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9.  Factors affecting antiretroviral pharmacokinetics in HIV-infected women with virologic suppression on combination antiretroviral therapy: a cross-sectional study.

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10.  Population pharmacokinetics of nevirapine in combination with rifampicin-based short course chemotherapy in HIV- and tuberculosis-infected South African patients.

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