| Literature DB >> 26202517 |
Margreke J Brill1,2, Anne van Rongen1,2, Eric P van Dongen3, Bert van Ramshorst4, Eric J Hazebroek4, Adam S Darwich5, Amin Rostami-Hodjegan5, Catherijne A Knibbe6,7.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Bariatric surgery is nowadays commonly applied as treatment for morbid obesity (BMI > 40 kg/m(2)). As information about the effects of this procedure on a drug's pharmacokinetics is limited, we aimed to evaluate the pharmacokinetics of CYP3A probe substrate midazolam after oral and intravenous administration in a cohort of morbidly obese patients that was studied before and 1 year post bariatric surgery.Entities:
Keywords: CYP3A; bariatric surgery; midazolam; pharmacokinetics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26202517 PMCID: PMC4628089 DOI: 10.1007/s11095-015-1752-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharm Res ISSN: 0724-8741 Impact factor: 4.200
Patients and Study Characteristics (Mean ± Standard Deviation)
| Morbidly obese patients before surgery ( | Minimum-maximum | Patients after bariatric surgery ( | Minimum-maximum | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female/Male | 12/8 | 11/7 | ||
| Age (years) | 43.6 ± 7.6 | 26–57 | 45.5 ± 7.4 | 27–58 |
| Body weight (kg) | 144.4 ± 21.7 | 112–186 | 98.3 ± 18.0 | 62–138 |
| LBW (kg) | 71.5 ± 11.9 | 53–95 | 59.5 ± 10.0 | 39–73 |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 47.1 ± 6.5 | 40–68 | 31.9 ± 5.9 | 24–50 |
| Weight loss (kg) | – | – | 44.5 ± 10.2 | 21–58 |
| Number of midazolam samples per patient | 22 ± 3 | 13–24 | 21 ± 1 | 19–22 |
| Gastric bypass/ sleeve gastrectomy | – | – | 16/2 | – |
| Time post surgery (weeks) | – | – | 51.8 ± 2.5 | 49–57 |
BMI body mass index, LBW lean body weight
Fig. 1Midazolam concentration versus time after oral dose profiles upon a 7.5 mg oral midazolam dose and a 5 mg intravenous dose separated by 160 ± 48 min in 20 morbidly obese patients before (black lines) and 1 year after surgery (grey dotted lines). Two patients were unable to participate 1 year after surgery.
Parameter Values of the Simple (Without Covariates) and Final (With Covariates) Population Pharmacokinetic Models and Results of the Bootstrap Analysis
| Parameter | Simple model of simultaneous analysis | Final model of simultaneous analysis | Bootstrap of final simultaneous model |
|---|---|---|---|
| Value (RSE) | Value (RSE) | Median ( | |
| Fixed effects | |||
| Ka = Ktr | 0.199 (11%) | – | – |
| Ka = KtrMorbidly obese (min−1) | – | 0.117 (15%) | 0.114 (0.08–0.15) |
| Ka = KtrBariatric patients (min−1) | – | 0.267 (19%) | 0.263 (0.08–0.45) |
| F | 0.560 (10%) | 0.537 (9%) | 0.543 (0.44–0.63) |
| CL (L/min) | 0.381 (26%) | – | – |
| CLMorbidly obese (L/min) | – | 0.385 (11%) | 0.366 (0.29–0.48) |
| fCLBariatric patients(L/min) | – | 1.68 (7%) ( | 1.70 (1.18–2.18) ( |
| Q (L/min) | 0.888 (21%) | – | – |
| QMorbidly obese (L/min) | – | 0.669 (24%) | 0.764 (0.11–1.23) |
| fQBariatric patients (L/min) | – | 3.22 (32%) ( | 2.907 (−22.6–29.0) ( |
| Q2 | 0.644 (21%) | 0.551(23%) | 0.548 (0.25–0.86) |
| Vcentral (L) | 54.7 (17%) | – | – |
| Vcentral Morbidly obese = Vmedian BW *(1 + X*(BW-median BW)) | |||
| Vmedian BW | – | 37.3 (18%) | 37.2 (17.8–56.8) |
| X | – | 0.0435 (92%) | 0.052 (−0.42–0.51) |
| Vcentral Bariatric patients (L) | – | 37.3 (18%) | 37.2 () |
| V1st peripheral (L) | 247 (30%) | – | – |
| VPeripheral Morbidly obese = Vmedian BW*(BW/median BW)Y | |||
| Vmedian BW | – | 106 (17%) | 113 (20.9–190.3) |
| Y | – | 3.93 (20%) | 3.99 (1.9–5.9) |
| V1st peripheral Bariatric patients (L) | – | 106 (17%) | 113 (1.9–5.9) |
| fV2nd peripheral | 0.169 (25%) ( | 0.359 (27%) ( | 0.311 (0.13–0.58) (* |
| Interindividual variability (%) | |||
| Ktr = Ka | 50 (17%) | 42.4 (15%) | 40.6 (27–54) |
| CL | 41.5 (24%) | 19.7 (38%) | 17.7 (−14–32) |
| F | 28.6 (23%) | 33.4 (18%) | 32.6 (16–45) |
| Vcentral | 60.8 (20%) | 53.7 (39%) | 54.3 (−49–102) |
| V1st peripheral | 0 FIX | 0 FIX | 0 FIX |
| Proportional residual error (%) | |||
| 46.2 (6%) | 42.1 (5%) | 41.0 (12.2) | |
| OFV | 6218 | 5885 | 5997 (804) |
BW body weight (median = 127 kg for all data), CL Clearance (L/min), F Oral bioavailability, fCL (L/min) fraction of midazolam clearance of morbidly obese patients to estimate bariatic patient clearance, fQ fraction of intercompartmental clearance of morbidly obese patients to estimate intercompartmental clearance of bariatric patients, fV fraction of first peripheral volume of distribution to estimate second peripheral volume, Ktr transit compartment rate (min−1), Ka oral absorption rate (min−1), OFV Objective function value (-2LL), Q intercompartmental clearance (L/min), RSE(%) relative standard error, V Volume of distribution (L), V first peripheral volume of distribution
Fig. 2Observed versus individual predicted midazolam concentrations (a), observed versus population predicted midazolam concentrations (b), conditional weighted residuals (CWRES) versus time (c) and population predicted midazolam concentrations (d) of the final model for 20 morbidly obese patients (black dots, occasion 1) of which 18 returned 1 year post surgery for a second study visit (grey dots, occasion 2). The dashed line represents the line of identity (x = y).
Fig. 3Population mean (black line) and 90% interval (grey area) of midazolam concentrations versus time after a 5 mg intravenous dose (a), a 2.5 mg/h continuous infusion (b) and a 7.5 mg oral dose (c) in morbidly obese patients before bariatric surgery (black solid line) and after bariatric surgery (black dotted line).
Fig. 4Empirical bayes estimates (black dots) and population mean estimates (black lines) of midazolam clearance (a) and oral bioavailability (b) of the final pharmacokinetic model in 20 morbidly obese patients (black closed dots) and 18 bariatric patients (black open dots) versus body weight (kg). Parameter values found for healthy volunteers studies from the literature were added for comparison (grey dots) (25,34–40).