| Literature DB >> 1976065 |
J L Ferrero1, B A Bopp, K C Marsh, S C Quigley, M J Johnson, D J Anderson, J E Lamm, K G Tolman, S W Sanders, J H Cavanaugh.
Abstract
The metabolic fate and pharmacokinetics of clarithromycin following a single 250- or 1200-mg oral dose of 14C-clarithromycin were studied in six healthy adult males. Peak plasma levels of clarithromycin averaged 0.6 microgram/ml after the low dose and 2.7 micrograms/ml after the high dose. The AUC of clarithromycin increased 13-fold, with the 4.8-fold increase in dose, while the plasma half-life increased from 4.4 hr to 11.3 hr. The major metabolite in plasma and urine was the microbiologically active 14-hydroxylated-R epimer of clarithromycin. After 5 days, a mean of 38% of the low dose (18% as clarithromycin) and 46% of the high dose (29% as clarithromycin) was recovered in the urine, with approximately one-third eliminated during the first 24 hr. The nature of the urinary and fecal metabolites revealed the involvement of three metabolic pathways, viz. 1) hydroxylation at the 14-position to form the R and S epimers, 2) N-demethylation, and 3) hydrolysis of the cladinose sugar. Secondary metabolism via these pathways was also evident. The overall recovery of metabolites, but not total radioactivity, decreased 42% after the high dose. The nonlinear pharmacokinetic behavior of clarithromycin and the decrease in metabolite production suggest that clarithromycin metabolism can be saturated at high doses.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 1990 PMID: 1976065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Metab Dispos ISSN: 0090-9556 Impact factor: 3.922