| Literature DB >> 27121336 |
Craig R Shadle1, M Gail Murphy1, Yang Liu1, Maureen Ho1, Daniel Tatosian1, Susie Xiujiang Li1, Robert A Blum1.
Abstract
Fosaprepitant dimeglumine, a lyophilized prodrug, is rapidly converted to aprepitant, a substance P/neurokinin 1 (NK1 ) receptor antagonist. Intravenous (IV) fosaprepitant and oral aprepitant are used in combination with other antiemetics to prevent chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting. This randomized, phase 1 study was designed to assess the aprepitant area under the curve (AUC0-∞ ) equivalence of a single, oral 165-mg or 185-mg dose of aprepitant to a single 150-mg fosaprepitant IV dose infused over 20 minutes, and to evaluate the effect of food on the bioavailability of the oral 165-mg and 185-mg aprepitant doses. Plasma samples were analyzed for aprepitant, and linear mixed-effects models were applied to natural log-transformed aprepitant AUC data. A 2 one-sided tests procedure was used to evaluate bioequivalence; the adjusted P values for the AUC0-∞ of both oral doses versus the IV dose were < .05, supporting the hypothesis that each single, oral dose of aprepitant is equivalent to the AUC0-∞ of a single IV infusion of fosaprepitant. Food effect results suggest that dose adjustment would not be necessary with a single oral dose of aprepitant. Single-dose administration of oral 165 mg and 185 mg aprepitant and IV 150 mg fosaprepitant was generally well tolerated. 2012 American College of Clinical Pharmacology.Entities:
Keywords: aprepitant; bioequivalence; food effect; fosaprepitant; tolerability
Year: 2012 PMID: 27121336 DOI: 10.1177/2160763X12447304
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Pharmacol Drug Dev ISSN: 2160-763X