Literature DB >> 19179296

The effect of reporting methods for dosing times on the estimation of pharmacokinetic parameters of escitalopram.

Yuyan Jin1, Bruce G Pollock, Ellen Frank, Jeff Florian, Margaret Kirshner, Andrea Fagiolini, David J Kupfer, Marc R Gastonguay, Gail Kepple, Yan Feng, Robert R Bies.   

Abstract

The objective of this study was to compare population pharmacokinetic models of escitalopram developed from dosage times recorded by a medication event monitoring system (MEMS) versus the reported times from patients with diagnosed depression. Seventy-three patients were prescribed doses of 10, 15, or 20 mg escitalopram daily. Sparse blood samples were collected at weeks 4, 12, 24, and 36 with 185 blood samples obtained from the 73 patients. NONMEM was used to develop a population pharmacokinetic model based on dosing records obtained from MEMS prior to each blood sample time. A separate population pharmacokinetic analysis using NONMEM was performed for the same population using the patient-reported last dosing time and assuming a steady-state condition as the model input. Objective function values and goodness-of-fit plots were used as model selection criteria. The absolute mean difference in the last dosing time between MEMS and patient-reported times was 4.48 +/- 10.12 hours. A 1-compartment model with first-order absorption and elimination was sufficient for describing the data. Estimated oral clearance (CL/F) to escitalopram was statistically insensitive to reported dosing methods (MEMS vs patient reported: 25.5 [7.0%] vs 26.9 [6.6%] L/h). However, different dosing report methods resulted in significantly different estimates on the volume of distribution (V/F; MEMS vs patient reported: 1000 [17.3%] vs 767 [17.5%] L) and the absorption rate constant K(a) (MEMS vs patient reported: 0.74 [45.7%] vs 0.51 [35.4%] h(-1)) for escitalopram. Furthermore, the parameters estimated from the MEMS method were similar to literature reported values for V/F ( approximately 1100 L) and K(a) ( approximately 0.8-0.9 h(-1)) arising from traditional pharmacokinetic approaches.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19179296      PMCID: PMC2688454          DOI: 10.1177/0091270008327538

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Pharmacol        ISSN: 0091-2700            Impact factor:   3.126


  22 in total

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2.  The pharmacokinetics of escitalopram after oral and intravenous administration of single and multiple doses to healthy subjects.

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