| Literature DB >> 21403873 |
Offie P Soldin1, Sarah H Chung, Donald R Mattison.
Abstract
Physiological, hormonal, and genetic differences between males and females affect the prevalence, incidence, and severity of diseases and responses to therapy. Understanding these differences is important for designing safe and effective treatments. This paper summarizes sex differences that impact drug disposition and includes a general comparison of clinical pharmacology as it applies to men and women.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21403873 PMCID: PMC3051160 DOI: 10.1155/2011/187103
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Biotechnol ISSN: 1110-7243
Suggested reasons for sex differences in adverse event reporting.
| Reason for sex difference | Pharmacological reason | Pharmacological factors |
|---|---|---|
| Women are overdosed | Pharmacokinetics | Sex differences in volume of distribution |
| Women are more sensitive | Pharmacodynamics | Sex differences in drug targets |
| Women are prescribed multiple medications | Drug-drug interactions | Drug-drug induced alterations |
(Table modified from Soldin and Mattison [5]).
Sex differences in plasma binding.
| Compound | Description |
|---|---|
| Testosterone | Plasma protein binding: F > M, Estrogen increases |
| Chlordiazepoxide | Plasma protein binding: M > F > Foc |
| Diazepam | Free fraction: Foc (1.99%) > F (1.67%) > M (1.46%) |
| Lidocaine | Free fraction: F (34%), M (32%) < Foc (37%) |
| Warfarin | Free fraction: F > M |
| Morphine, Phenytoin Oxazepam, Lorazepam | No differences |
oc: oral contraceptives.
Table modified from Soldin and Mattison [5].
Sex differences in hepatic clearance by route of metabolism/elimination.
| Metabolic route | Model substrates | Drugs metabolized by route | Sex-specific activity |
|---|---|---|---|
| CYP1A | Caffeine, nicotine paracetamol (acetaminophen) | Clomipramine, clozapine, olanzapine, paracetamol, tacrine, theophylline | |
| CYP2C9 | Dapsone, ( | Ibuprofen, ( | |
| CYP2C19 | ( | Lansoprazole, omeprazole, hexobarbital, mephobarbital, citalopram, celecoxib, irbesartan, imipramine, piroxicam, propranolol (in part) | |
| CYP2D6 | Dextromethorphan, debrisoquine, sparteine | Codeine, encainide, flecainide, fluoxetine, hydrocodone, metoprolol, paroxetine, mexilitine, phenformin, propranolol, sertraline, timolol, haloperidol, clomipramine, desipramine, imipramine, propafenone, testosterone | |
| CYP2E1 | Chlorzoxazone | ||
| CYP3A | Midazolam, dapsone, cortisol, Lidocaine, nifedipine, erythromycin | Alprazolam, alfentanil, astemizole, atorvastatin, carbamazepine, cisapride, clarithromycin, cyclosporin, cyclophosphamide, diazepam,diltiazem, erythromycin, estradiol, fentanyl, indinavir, itraconazole, ketoconazole, lovastatin, quinidine, nimodipine, nisoldipine, quinidine, ritonavir, verapamil, tacrolimus, simvastatin, vincristine, vinblastine, tamoxifen, tirilazad, troglitazone | |
| Metabolic route | Model substrates | Drugs metabolized by route | Sex-specific activity |
| UDP-glucuronosyl-transferases | Caffeine | Clofibric acid, diflusinal, ibuprofen, mycophenolate, mofetil, paracetamol, zidovudine | |
| Sulfotransferases | Caffeine | — | |
| N-Acetyl-transferases | Caffeine, dapsone | Catecholamine derivatives, mercaptopurine, isoniazid, hydralazine | |
| Methyl-transferases | Norepinehrine, epinephrine | Azathioprine, dopamine, levodopa, 6-mercaptopurine, thioguanine, tazathioprine | |
Table modified from Soldin and Mattison [5].
Some drugs that display sex differences in pharmacokinetics.*
| Drug | Pharmacokinetic parameter | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Acebutolol [ | Area under the concentration-time curve | The concentration-time profile is larger in women, suggesting greater therapeutic and potential side effects |
| Aspirin [ | Clearance, half-life | Aspirin is cleared more rapidly from women |
| Benzylamine | Following transdermal absorption, women excrete 3 times more than men | |
| Beta-Blockers; | Oral clearance lower in women, lower volume of distribution in women resulting in higher systemic exposure | The greater reduction in blood pressure in women was due to pharmacokinetic and not pharmacodynamic differences |
| Cefotaxime [ | Clearance | Clearance is decreased in women |
| Ciprofloxacin [ | Clearance | Clearance is lower in women |
| Cephradine [ | Slower rate of absorption and lower bioavailability in the female; increased clearance and decreased terminal elimination half-life in pregnancy | |
| Clozapine [ | significantly higher plasma levels for women | |
| Diazepam [ | Plasma binding | Larger volume of distribution in women |
| Ethanol [ | Volume of distribution, clearance, and first-pass metabolism | When ethanol is ingested, men metabolize more in first pass metabolism; in addition the volume of distribution is smaller in women |
| Ferrous Sulfate | Absorption | Absorption higher in prepubertal girls than boys |
| Fluoroquinolones [ | Volume of distribution | Lower in women |
| Gemcitabine [ | Clearance | Clearance is lower in women |
| Heparin [ | Clearance | Clearance is lower in women |
| Iron [ | Absorption measured as % of the dose incorporated into red blood cells | More ingested iron is absorbed by women than men |
| Methylprednisolone [ | Plasma binding, clearance, volume of distribution, and half-life | Plasma binding and |
| Metronidazole | Volume of distribution | Smaller volume of distribution and increased clearance resulting in lower AUC in women |
| Metoprolol [ | Plasma binding, clearance, volume of distribution, half-life | Clearance increases during pregnancy, but is smaller in women; |
| Midazolam [ | Considered to be probe for CYP3A4, not substrate for PGP | No sex difference in clearance following either oral or intramuscular administration; interpretation complicated by |
| Mizolastin [ | Oral availability | Longer duration for absorption in men, contributing to variability in drug concentrations in men and women |
| Naratriptan [ | Oral availability, peak concentration | Oral bioavailability being greater in women results in peak concentration is higher in women than men |
| Ofloxacin | Clearance | Clearance is lower in women |
| Olanzapine [ | Higher activity in women for CYP3A4 and CYP2D6 | Significantly higher plasma levels for women |
| Ondansetron [ | Oral availability, clearance | Oral availability is increased in women |
| Phenytoin [ | Plasma binding | |
| Prednisolone [ | Distribution | Oral clearance and volume of distribution significantly higher in men |
| Propranolol [ | Plasma binding, clearance, volume of distribution, and half-life | Plasma binding is similar among men and women; however, plasma binding increases during pregnancy. Clearance is smaller in women. |
| Quinine [ | Plasma binding, clearance, volume of distribution, and half-life | Plasma binding is unaltered during pregnancy, as is clearance. |
| Rifampicin [ | Women absorb the drug more efficiently | — |
| Rizatriptan [ | Urinary excretion, clearance, volume of distribution, half-life | Urinary excretion is similar in men and women; clearance is greater in men |
| Rocuronium | Distribution | Prolonged drug duration due to higher fat content and lower organ blood flow in women |
| Salicylate [ | Absorption | Increased rates of absorption in women |
| Selective Serotonin | Plasma concentrations are higher in women | Decreased metabolism by hepatic CYP |
| Vecuronium | Distribution | Prolonged drug duration due to higher fat content and lower organ blood flow in women |
| Verapamil; Calcium channel blocker [ | Clearance following intravenous administration more rapid in women, but oral clearance higher in men than women. Substrate for both CYP3A4 and PGP | Sex differences in hepatic and gut CYP3A4 and PGP lead to complex differences in clearance between men and women. Bioavailability from the gut is greater in women. The greater bioavailability leads to increased systemic exposure in women |
| Oral clearance is lower in women |
*Pregnancy-related PK changes are in italics font.
Table modified from Soldin and Mattison [5].