| Literature DB >> 26022219 |
Hartley C Atkinson1, Amanda L Potts, Brian J Anderson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Increased bioavailability of phenylephrine is reported when combined with paracetamol in over-the-counter formulations for the symptomatic treatment of the common cold and influenza. Such formulations could increase phenylephrine-related cardiovascular adverse events particularly in susceptible individuals. Quantification of the effect of phenylephrine concentration on blood pressure allows simulation of potential adverse combination therapy effects.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26022219 PMCID: PMC4500855 DOI: 10.1007/s00228-015-1876-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Clin Pharmacol ISSN: 0031-6970 Impact factor: 2.953
Cardiovascular effects following administration of phenylephrine alone or in combination with other medications—overview of literature review
| Phenylephrine dose | Population | Result | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oral | ||||
| 10—25 mg | Normotensive participants with common cold ( | ↑ HR cf. placebo doses ≥10 mg | Cohen et al. [ | |
| 10 mg | Normotensive participants with nasal congestion ( | NC BP | Conflicting results | McLaurin et al. [ |
| 250 mg | Normotensive volunteers ( | Average ↓ in HR = 21 bpm | Threshold for pressor response estimated to be 50 mg. | Keys and Violante [ |
| 45 mg | Normotensive volunteers ( | Significant ↑ in BP | ≥67 mmHg ↑ in BP in two participants administered single 45-mg dose of phenylephrine after 7 days of MOA inhibitor therapy (tranylcypromine or phenelzine). Required intervention with phentolamine. | Elis et al. [ |
| 10 mg | Normotensive volunteers ( | Significant ↑ in BP | 20 mmHg ↑ in BP after 10 mg phenylephrine dose following 11 days on tranylcypromine | Elis et al. [ |
| Unclear—?10 mg | 74-year-old women with comorbidities, concurrent MOA inhibitors | Significant ↑ in BP (hypertensive crisis—BP up to 230/120 mmHg) | Combination of phenylephrine from an over-the-counter preparation, terbutaline and taloxatone. | Lefebvre et al. [ |
| Unclear—overdose | 24-year-old otherwise healthy male | Significant ↑ in BP (196/100 mmHg, ↓ in HR (40 bpm), third-degree atrioventricular block | Ingestion of 30–40 tablets each containing 40 mg phenylpropanolamine, 10 mg phenylephrine, 5 mg chlorpheniramine and 15 mg phenyltoloxamine | Burton et al. [ |
| Unclear—up to 60 mg/day for 4 days | 59-year-old otherwise healthy female | ICH, SAH | Took cold and flu medications containing PE, paracetamol, dextromethorphan and chlorpheniramine for 4 days before hospitalization | Tark et al. [ |
| Topical (eye drops, nasal packs, nasal sprays) | ||||
| 2.5 or 10 % single eye drop | Cataract surgery—normotensive and hypertensive patients ( | ↑ BP following both 2.5 and 10 % eye drop in both normotensive and hypertensive patients. | 4/30 patients in 10 % group and 1/29 patients in the 2.5 % group developed severe hypertension which required intravenous hypotensive agents for management—all patients who developed severe hypertension had baseline hypertension. | Chin et al. [ |
| 2.5 or 10 % single eye drop | Cataract surgery—normotensive and hypertensive patients ( | ↑ BP following both 2.5 and 10 % eye drop in both normotensive and hypertensive patients. | Kenawy et al. [ | |
| 2.5 % eye single drop | Cataract surgery—normotensive and hypertensive patients ( | NC BP | Severe hypertension, unstable angina and uncontrolled diabetes all exclusions. | Lam et al. [ |
| 2.5 or 10 % single eye drop | Cataract surgery—normotensive ( | NC BP | Normotensive participants only—no history of cardiovascular disease | Malhotra et al. [ |
| 2.5 or 10 % single eye drop | Funduscopy ( | NC BP | Normotensive participants only | Motta et al. [ |
| 10 % single eye drop | 49-year-old female, medically controlled hypertension | SAH, rupture cerebral aneurysm, BP 200/108 mmHg, HR 48 bpm, death | Possible interaction with propranolol—not able to vasodilate to counteract pressor effect of PE | Cass et al. [ |
| 2.5 % single eye drop | 72-year-old female, medically controlled hypertension, diabetes mellitus | ICH, BP 300/200 mmHg | Weisberg et al. [ | |
| 10 % four times eye drops | 57-year-old man, no known cardiovascular disease | Acute myocardial infarct, severe hypertension and cardiac arrhythmia | Lai [ | |
| 500 mg via nasal pack | 30-year-old man, healthy | Severe hypertension (210/146 mmHg) and bradycardia (45 bpm) | Macmillan and Barker [ | |
| 0.25 % solution via nasal pack | 23-year-old woman, no coronary artery disease | Myocardial infarct | Combined with 4 % cocaine for local anaesthesia | Ashchi et al. [ |
| 0.25 % solution via nasal pack | 28-year-old man | Acute hypertension (190/100 mmHg), pulmonary oedema | Patient had history of smoking cocaine | Singh et al. [ |
| Unclear—?daily nasal spray TID | 57-year-old male | ICH, SAH, occipital infarct, BP 240/110 mmHg | Nasal spray TID for 4 months | Cantu et al. [ |
| Unclear—nasal spray | 30-year-old, postpartum female | SAH | Nasal spray daily for 1 week | Chartier et al. [ |
| Unclear—nasal spray | 45-year-old female | SAH | Nasal spray for many weeks | Genonceaux et al. [ |
| Injectable | ||||
| 25 μg/min | Women scheduled for elective caesarean section ( | Significant reduction (up to 20 %) in HR and CO in 100 μg/min group | Stewart et al. [ | |
| 100 μg/min intrathecal infusion | 31-year-old woman, emergency caesarean section | Ventricular bigeminy | Lai et al. [ | |
| 150 μg iv | 35-year-old woman, elective caesarean section | ICH | Three 50-μg doses of PE for treatment of hypotension | Ranasinghe et al. [ |
↑ increase, ↓ decrease, cf. compared with, NC no change, HR heart rate, BP blood pressure, PE phenylephrine, CO cardiac output, TID three times daily, QID four times daily, ICH intracerebral haemorrhage, SAH subarachnoid haemorrhage
Standardised phenylephrine population pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic parameter estimates for ophthalmic PKPD analysis
| Parameter | Estimate | %BSV | 95 % CI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pharmacokinetics | ||||
| CLstd (L h−1 70 kg−1) | 139 | 38.3 | 61.5, 235.9 | |
| V1std (L 70 kg−1) | 15.3 | 106.3 | 9.5, 73.9 | |
| Qstd (L h−1 70 kg−1) | 30 | 130 | 23.9, 311 | |
| V2std (L 70 kg−1) | 235 | 101 | 102, 562 | |
| Tabs oral (h) | 0.52 | 40 | 0.34, 0.63 | |
| Lag oral (h) | 0.247 | – | 0.21, 0.26 | |
| Bioavailability oral | 0.014 | 0.008, 0.051 | ||
| Tabs ophthalmic 2.5 % (h) | 0.07 | 71 | 0.03, 0.11 | |
| Bioavailability 2.5 % ophthalmic solution | 0.15 | 0.077, 0.506 | ||
| Tabs ophthalmic 10 % (h) | 0.275 | – | 0.21, 0.34 | |
| Bioavailability 10 % ophthalmic solution | 0.14 | 0.071, 0.557 | ||
| Residual error | Additive (mcg L−1) | 0.013 | – | 0.001, 0.015 |
| Proportional (%) | 32.6 | 25.2, 39.9 | ||
| Pharmacodynamics | ||||
| E0 (mmHg) | 86.3 | 4.4 | 81.6, 90.2 | |
| EC50 (mcg L−1) | 11.1 | 141 | 1.67. 19.9 | |
| Emax (mmHg) | 51.2 | 44.8 | 20.5, 109.1 | |
| Residual error | Additive (mcg L−1) | 9.88 | – | 7.03, 11.7 |
| Proportional (%) | 61.6 | – | 0.6, 125 | |
BSV between-subject parameter variability, CI confidence interval
The correlation of parameter between-subject variability
| CL | Q | V1 | V2 | Tabs | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CL | 1 | ||||
| Q | −0.799 | 1 | |||
| V1 | −0.817 | 0.651 | 1 | ||
| V2 | −0.630 | 0.093 | 0.533 | 1 | |
| Tabs | 0.512 | −0.463 | −0.148 | −0.239 | 1 |
Fig. 1Visual predictive check for the PKPD model. All plots show median and 90 % intervals (solid and dashed lines). Also shown are prediction percentiles (10, 50 and 90 %) for observations (lines with symbols) and predictions (lines) with 95 % confidence intervals for prediction percentiles (grey-shaded areas). The upper panel is the pharmacokinetic fit using PK data from all formulations while the lower panel is the pharmacodynamic fit involving data only from subjects undergoing ophthalmic surgery
Fig. 2The relationship between phenylephrine concentration and MAP in patients undergoing ophthalmic surgery
Fig. 3Pharmacodynamic parameter estimates from patients (mean age 34.3 years, 70 kg) undergoing ophthalmic surgery were combined with derived pharmacokinetic estimates from the current study to simulate mean time-concentration (solid lines) and mean arterial blood pressure changes (dashed lines) that might occur when given oral phenylephrine with and without paracetamol