| Literature DB >> 27121790 |
Marwan Ghabril1, Igor A Zupanets2, John Vierling3, Parvez Mantry4, Don Rockey5, David Wolf6, Robert O'Shea7, Klara Dickinson8, Heather Gillaspy8, Catherine Norris8, Dion F Coakley8, Masoud Mokhtarani8, Bruce F Scharschmidt8.
Abstract
Glycerol tri-(4-phenylbutyrate) (glycerol phenylbutyrate, GPB, HPN-100) mediates waste nitrogen excretion through conjugation with glutamine to form phenylacetylglutamine which is excreted in urine. This pilot study was performed to assess tolerability and effect on venous ammonia concentration in patients with cirrhosis and hepatic encephalopathy (HE). Patients underwent one week of 6 mL (6.6 g) twice daily (BID). GPB dosing followed by 3 weeks of 9 mL (9.9 g) BID dosing and underwent repeated blood sampling for ammonia concentration and pharmacokinetics. Fifteen patients were enrolled. Ammonia concentrations were lowest after overnight fast and increased post-prandially. Fasting ammonia concentrations were lower on GPB compared to baseline, with a decrease on the eighth day of 6 mL BID dosing to 45.4 (27.9) µmol/L (ULN ∼48 µmol/L) (P < .05). Nine milliliters BID yielded similar lowering but was associated with more adverse events and higher phenylacetate (PAA) plasma concentrations (PAA Cmax of 144 [125] vs. 292 [224] µg/mL on 6 and 9 mL, respectively). GPB dosed at 6 mL BID lowered fasting ammonia levels in cirrhotic patients with HE as compared with baseline, was better tolerated than 9 mL BID, and is appropriate for further evaluation in patients with cirrhosis and episodic HE.Entities:
Keywords: ammonia; cirrhosis; hepatic encephalopathy; phenylacetylglutamine; phenylbutyrate
Year: 2013 PMID: 27121790 DOI: 10.1002/cpdd.18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Pharmacol Drug Dev ISSN: 2160-763X