| Literature DB >> 31316382 |
Joske Millecam1, Siegrid De Baere1, Siska Croubels1, Mathias Devreese1.
Abstract
The juvenile conventional pig has been suggested as a preclinical animal model to evaluate pharmacokinetic (PK), pharmacodynamic (PD), and safety parameters in children. However, a lot of developmental changes in pig physiology still need to be unraveled. While the in vitro ontogeny of pig biotransformation enzymes is getting more attention in literature, the in vivo developmental changes have not yet been investigated. Therefore, the aim of the current study was to evaluate the biotransformation of ibuprofen (IBU) in conventional pigs aged 1 week, 4 weeks, 8 weeks, and 6-7 months after a single intravenous and oral administration of 5 mg/kg body weight (BW) of IBU, using a PK approach in a crossover design for each age group. An ultra-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-MS/MS) method was developed and validated to determine 2-hydroxyibuprofen (2OH-IBU), carboxyibuprofen (COOH-IBU), and ibuprofen glucuronide (IBU-GlcA) in pig plasma. All three metabolites could be quantified in plasma and the following PK parameters were determined: C max, T max, AUC0→6h, area under plasma concentration-time curve (AUC) ratio between parent drug and metabolite, and the absolute oral bioavailability of the parent drug IBU. The plasma concentrations of the metabolites were always lower than those of IBU. The bioavailability was high, indicating limited pre-systemic biotransformation. The AUC ratio of 2OH-IBU and COOH-IBU/IBU showed a significant increase at 4 weeks of age compared to the 1-week-old and 6- to 7-month-old pigs. Interestingly, the IBU-GlcA/IBU AUC ratio did not change with age. The present study demonstrated that the main metabolites of IBU in human are also present in growing pigs. The oxidative phase I metabolism of IBU in growing conventional pigs did change with age. In contrast, age did not seem to affect the glucuronidation capacity of IBU in conventional pigs, although more studies with other substrate drugs are needed to confirm this.Entities:
Keywords: age; biotransformation; cytochrome P450; ibuprofen; in vivo; metabolites; pig; uridine 5′-diphospho-glucuronosyltransferase
Year: 2019 PMID: 31316382 PMCID: PMC6610244 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2019.00712
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1Chemical structure of ibuprofen and its metabolites, ibuprofen glucuronide, 2-hydroxyibuprofen, and carboxyibuprofen. Structures are derived from Drugbank1. (Wishart et al., 2008)
Figure 2The mean (±SD) log concentration–time profiles after intravenous (IV) (left) and oral (PO) (right) administration of 5 mg/kg BW of ibuprofen (blue dots) with their corresponding metabolites 2-hydroxyibuprofen (2OH-IBU, orange square), carboxyibuprofen (COOH-IBU, gray triangle), and ibuprofen glucuronide (IBU-GlcA, yellow diamond). From top to bottom are the curves for the 1-week-old, 4-week-old, 8-week-old, and 6- to 7-month-old pigs (each time, 8 pigs, 4 ♂, 4 ♀) represented, respectively. Time post administration (p.a.).
The mean values of the pharmacokinetic parameters (standard deviation, SD) of ibuprofen and its main metabolites, 2-hydroxyibuprofen, carboxyibuprofen, and ibuprofen glucuronide after intravenous (IV) or oral (PO) administration of 5 mg/kg BW ibuprofen to pigs aged 1 week, 4 weeks, 8 weeks, and 6–7 months (each time, 8 pigs, 4 ♂, 4 ♀).
| 1 week old | 4 weeks old | 8 weeks old | 6–7 months old | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IV | PO | IV | PO | IV | PO | IV | PO | |
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| 18.0 (1.3)a$ | 13.6 (4.0)$ | 26.5 (10.7)a$ | 11.4 (7.4)$ | 18.2 (4.4)a$ | 11.9 (4.9)$ | 39.4 (6.2)b$ | 16.8 (9.0)$ |
|
| – | 32.3 (20.5) | – | 72.5 (57.7) | – | 62.5 (40.4) | – | 63.8 (50.6) |
| AUC0–6h (min*µg/ml) | 1,847.5 (449.0)a | 1,673.2 (358.6)ab | 1,702.1 (495.4)a | 1,393.9 (472.7)ab | 990.6 (195.7)b | 891.2 (386.8)a | 2,603.5 (937.1)c* | 1,971.5 (943.2)b |
| F (%) | 94.8 (25.2) | 85.5 (30.9) | 90.1 (33.9) | 84.4 (41.7) | ||||
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| 384.2 (39.2)a | 397.4 (128.7)a | 1,282.3 (528.8)bA$ | 746.2 (419.9)abAB$ | 934.7 (266.0)ab | 713.8 (334.3)ab | 1,483.3 (737.1)bA | 870.5 (374.1)b |
|
| 80.6 (33.0)ab | 97.5 (27.8)a | 124.3 (40.36)aA | 195.0 (107.9)b | 46.3 (32.81)b$ | 110.6 (60.0)ab$ | 63.8 (56.1)b | 101.9 (53.1)a |
| AUC0–6h (min*µg/ml) | 82.2 (9.1)a | 78.8 (20.8)AB | 320.3 (135.0)bA$ | 167.8 (115.2)A$ | 127.7 (65.9)aA | 96.8 (45.3) | 209.5 (143.5)abA | 160.8 (78.4)A |
| Ratio AUC (%) | 4.7 (1.2)a | 4.8 (1.09)a | 17.6 (12.6)bA | 11.6 (5.6)bA | 12.8 (6.0)abA | 11.3 (4.0)b | 8.7 (5.8)a | 9.8 (6.4)abAB |
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| 594.7 (171.9)a | 604.0 (241.8) | 1,384.5 (464.9)bA | 913.4 (648.4)A | 1,005.0 (289.5)ab | 694.9 (328.0) | 1,601.6 (593.6)cA | 1,118.2 (552.9) |
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| 84.4 (32.0)a | 91.9 (24.6) | 90.0 (24.5)aAB$ | 150.0 (60.0)$ | 34.4 (9.4)b$ | 101.3 (43.7)$ | 38.8 (22.8)b$ | 101.9 (55.5)$ |
| AUC0–6h (min*µg/ml) | 124.5 (20.1)a | 113.8 (40.6)A | 284.7 (124.7)bA | 175.8 (126.8)A | 106.0 (33.1)aA | 98.0 (36.6) | 190.2 (96.5)abA | 160.3 (61.9)A |
| Ratio AUC (%) | 7.3 (2.6)a | 6.7 (1.8) | 15.3 (10.7)bA | 11.5 (4.2)A | 10.9 (3.4)abAB | 7.7 (5.6) | 7.8 (4.0)a | 10.5 (8.3)A |
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| 404.3 (92.9) | 370.0 (118.1) | 393.1 (156.5)B | 335.4 (238.8)B | 658.1 (357.0) | 589.7 (335.3) | 818.9 (695.8)B* | 508.6 (302.2) |
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| 51.9 (23.9)a | 45.0 (21.2) | 37.1 (10.4)abB$ | 93.1 (51.7)$ | 20.6 (12.1)b$ | 69.4 (39.2)$ | 29.4 (27.8)ab | 69.3 (60.0) |
| AUC0–6h (min*µg/ml) | 61.0 (15.2)$ | 44.4 (12.6)B$ | 41.2 (20.4)B | 40.9 (27.0)B | 42.9 (22.8)B | 58.1 (21.6) | 63.3 (55.7)B | 60.5 (34.7)B |
| Ratio AUC (%) | 3.5 (1.1) | 2.7 (2.8)a | 2.1 (1.1)B | 2.8 (1.3)aB | 4.2 (1.8)B$ | 5.5 (2.8)b$ | 2.9 (2.7)* | 3.7 (1.9)aB |
C0, plasma concentration at time zero after intravenous (IV) administration for ibuprofen; Cmax, maximum plasma concentration; Tmax, time at which the Cmax is observed; AUC, area under plasma concentration–time curve; ratio AUC, ratio of AUC of metabolite to the AUC of ibuprofen.
Significant differences for a PK parameter between the age groups and within administration route are indicated with different small letters. Significant sex differences are indicated with an asterisk (*). Significant differences between IV and PO for the PK parameters, except C0/Cmax of IBU, are indicated with a $. Significant differences between the different metabolites within every age group and administration route are indicated with different capital letters.