Literature DB >> 27249205

A Pharmacokinetic Study Comparing Eslicarbazepine Acetate Administered Orally as a Crushed or Intact Tablet in Healthy Volunteers.

Soujanya Sunkaraneni1, Jahnavi Kharidia2, Ralph Schutz3, David Blum1, Hailong Cheng1.   

Abstract

The relative bioequivalence of crushed versus intact eslicarbazepine acetate (ESL) tablets (800 mg) administered orally in healthy adults was evaluated in an open-label, randomized, 2-period crossover study with a 5-day washout between treatments. Sample blood levels of eslicarbazepine and (R)-licarbazepine were determined; pharmacokinetic parameters were derived for eslicarbazepine. Bioequivalence was established if the 90% confidence intervals (CIs) for the geometric mean treatment ratios of eslicarbazepine AUC(0-∞) and Cmax were within the prespecified 80%-125% range. Twenty-seven subjects in the intent-to-treat population (n = 28) completed both treatment periods. Eslicarbazepine exposure measures were similar for crushed versus intact ESL tablets: average Cmax , 11 700 versus 11 500 ng/mL; AUC(0-∞) , 225 000 versus 234 000 ng·h/mL; AUC(0-last) , 222 000 versus 231 000 ng·h/mL, respectively. Geometric least squares mean ratios (90%CIs) comparing eslicarbazepine exposure measures were within the 80%-125% range (Cmax , 102.63% [97.07%-108.51%]; AUC(0-∞) , 96.72% [94.36%-99.13%]; AUC0-last , 96.69% [94.24%-99.21%]). In conclusion, ESL administered orally as a crushed tablet sprinkled on applesauce, or intact were bioequivalent in healthy subjects. Eslicarbazepine bioavailability was not significantly altered by crushing, indicating that ESL tablets can be administered intact or crushed.
© 2016, The American College of Clinical Pharmacology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  clinical trials (CTR); drug delivery (DEL); epilepsy; eslicarbazepine acetate; pharmacokinetics and drug metabolism

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27249205     DOI: 10.1002/cpdd.242

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Pharmacol Drug Dev        ISSN: 2160-763X


  1 in total

1.  Modeling and simulations to support dose selection for eslicarbazepine acetate therapy in pediatric patients with partial-onset seizures.

Authors:  Soujanya Sunkaraneni; Elizabeth Ludwig; Jill Fiedler-Kelly; Seth Hopkins; Gerald Galluppi; David Blum
Journal:  J Pharmacokinet Pharmacodyn       Date:  2018-06-09       Impact factor: 2.745

  1 in total

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