Literature DB >> 18611115

Replacement therapy of oral hydrocortisone in adrenal insufficiency: the influence of gastrointestinal factors.

Hans Lennernäs1, Stanko Skrtic, Gudmundur Johannsson.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Replacing glucocorticoids in primary adrenal insufficiency (AI) or Addison's disease (AD) is today based on oral replacement therapy with hydrocortisone in a conventional immediate-release tablet. It is recognised that physiological gastrointestinal factors may have a strong influence on the plasma concentration-time profile of hydrocortisone. Hydrocortisone has a sufficiently high permeability in both the small and large intestine, but in vivo dissolution from the available oral product is limited at higher doses. The short elimination half-life of hydrocortisone (approximately 1.5 h) when given in traditional immediate-release dosage forms requires two or more dose administrations per day, with high peaks and low trough values in between. The endogenous secretion of cortisol from the adrenal cortex follows a distinct diurnal pattern, with increasing and high plasma levels of cortisol early in the morning (approximately 05.00-08.00 h), intermediate levels in the afternoon, low levels in the evening and a cortisol-free interval at night. There is, therefore, a clinical need for an improved drug delivery product that more closely follows the circadian pattern of cortisol in plasma.
OBJECTIVE: The pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical properties of the dosage form containing hydrocortisone will determine intestinal absorption rate and the plasma concentration-time profile of hydrocortisone (cortisol). Factors that cause or result in pharmacokinetic variability should be understood and avoided where possible.
METHODS: A literature search was performed with the aim of covering the field of gastrointestinal drug absorption of hydrocortisone in AD. RESULTS/
CONCLUSION: Novel oral drug delivery principles for facilitation of once-daily dosing and providing a safe and physiologically based plasma concentration-time profile of hydrocortisone in replacement therapy are discussed. Development of new drug formulations is ongoing and will certainly lead to an improved replacement therapy of AD with hydrocortisone. Of special interest is a therapy based on once-daily treatment and less fluctuating plasma concentrations of hydrocortisone (cortisol).

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18611115     DOI: 10.1517/17425255.4.6.749

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Expert Opin Drug Metab Toxicol        ISSN: 1742-5255            Impact factor:   4.481


  10 in total

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2.  Improving glucocorticoid replacement in patients with adrenal insufficiency.

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Journal:  Endocrine       Date:  2016-04-04       Impact factor: 3.633

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4.  Predicting Cortisol Exposure from Paediatric Hydrocortisone Formulation Using a Semi-Mechanistic Pharmacokinetic Model Established in Healthy Adults.

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5.  Hydrocortisone malabsorption due to polyethylene glycols (Macrogol 3350) in a girl with congenital adrenal insufficiency.

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6.  In Vitro Evaluation of Cocoa Pod Husk Pectin as a Carrier for Chronodelivery of Hydrocortisone Intended for Adrenal Insufficiency.

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7.  Improved Urinary Cortisol Metabolome in Addison Disease: A Prospective Trial of Dual-Release Hydrocortisone.

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Review 8.  Sleep, Cognition and Cortisol in Addison's Disease: A Mechanistic Relationship.

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Review 9.  Therapy of endocrine disease: Perspectives on the management of adrenal insufficiency: clinical insights from across Europe.

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10.  An oral multiparticulate, modified-release, hydrocortisone replacement therapy that provides physiological cortisol exposure.

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  10 in total

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