| Literature DB >> 32080811 |
Dominick J Angiolillo1, Deepak L Bhatt2, Frank Lanza3, Efthymios N Deliargyris4, Jayne Prats5, Weihong Fan4, Upendra Marathi6.
Abstract
Dyspeptic symptoms are common with aspirin and clinicians frequently recommend that it be taken with food to reduce these side effects. However, food can interfere with absorption, especially with enteric-coated aspirin formulations. We evaluated whether food interferes with the bioavailability of a new, pharmaceutical lipid-aspirin complex (PL-ASA) liquid-filled capsule formulation. In this randomized, open label, crossover study, 20 healthy volunteers fasted for ≥ 10 h and then randomized as either "fasted", receiving 650 mg of PL-ASA, or as "fed", with a standard high-fat meal and 650 mg of PL-ASA 30 min later. After a washout of 7 days, participants crossed over to the other arm. The primary outcome was comparison of PK parameters of the stable aspirin metabolite salicylic acid (SA) between fasted and fed states. Mean age of participants was 36.8 years and 55% were male. The ratios for the fed to fasted states of the primary SA PK parameters of AUC0-t and AUC0-∞ were 88.7% and 88.8% respectively, with 90% confidence intervals between 80 and 125%, which is consistent with FDA bioequivalence guidance. Mean peak SA concentration was about 22% lower and occurred about 1.5 h later in the fed state. Food had a modest effect on peak SA levels and the time required to reach them after PL-ASA administration, but did not impact the extent of exposure (AUC) compared with intake in a fasted state. These data demonstrate that PL-ASA may be co-administered with food without significant impact on aspirin bioavailability.Clinical Trial Registration:http://www.clinicaltrials.gov Unique Identifier: NCT01244100.Entities:
Keywords: Aspirin; Bioavailability; Fasted; Fed; Pharmacokinetic; Platelet
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32080811 PMCID: PMC7145786 DOI: 10.1007/s11239-020-02051-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Thromb Thrombolysis ISSN: 0929-5305 Impact factor: 2.300
Fig. 1Study design
Summary of ratios between fed and fasted states for log- transformed PK parameters of salicylic acid
| PK parameter | N | LSM | Geometric mean | Ratioa (%) | 90% CIb | ANOVA p-valuec | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fed | Fasted | Fed | Fasted | |||||
| AUC0−t (ng × min/mL) | 20 | 9.53 | 9.65 | 13,772.6 | 15,521.3 | 88.7 | (82.27, 95.8) | 0.01 |
| AUC0−∞ (ng × min/mL) | 20 | 9.55 | 9.66 | 14,000.7 | 15,767.0 | 88.8 | (82.2, 96.0) | 0.02 |
| Cmax (ng/mL) | 20 | 3.36 | 3.61 | 28.9 | 37.1 | 77.8 | (72.3, 83.6) | < 0.0001 |
ANOVA analysis of variance; AUC0− area-under-the-curve; AUC0−∞ AUC0−t extrapolated to infinity; C maximum plasma concentration; CI confidence interval; LSM least square mean; mL milliliters; min minutes; N number of subjects; ng nanograms; PK pharmacokinetic; SD standard deviation
aRatio = 100% × geometric mean (fed) / geometric mean (fasted)
b90% Confidence interval on the ratio of fed and fasted
cp-value for the difference in the treatment estimates. Significant difference was defined as p-value < 0.05
Fig. 2Mean plasma salicylic acid concentration versus time. Plasma concentrations (log-linear scale) for salicylic acid are depicted after a single 650 mg dose of PL-ASA in the presence (fed, dotted line) and absence of food (fasting, solid line)
Summary of fed and fasted salicylic acid PK parameters after a single dose of 650 mg PL-ASA
| PK parametera | Fed N = 20 | Fasted N = 20 | P-valueb | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) | CV (%) | Median (range) | Mean (SD) | CV (%) | Median (range) | ||
| AUC0−t ([µg × min] /mL) | 14,945.7 (6436.2) | 43.1 | 14,929.1 (7844.8–33,463.9) | 16,521.8 (5958.7) | 36.1 | 16,582.0 (7915.6–32,414.2) | 0.3 |
| AUC0−∞ ([µg × min] /mL) | 15,202.9 (6723.0) | 44.2 | 14,952.5 (8175.7–35,576.8) | 16,791.0 (6167.9) | 36.7 | 17,036.1 (8224.8–34,102.3) | 0.3 |
| Cmax (µg/mL) | 29.9 (8.6) | 28.9 | 29.7 (17.9–55.3) | 38.3 (9.9) | 25.8 | 38.9 (22.2–57.8) | 0.01 |
| tmax (min) | 283.5 (96.1) | 33.9 | 360.0 (90.0–360.0) | 180.0 (50.6) | 28.1 | 180.0 (90.0–240.0) | 0.002 |
| λZ (1/min) | 0.0048 (0.0009) | 19.2 | 0.0050 (0.0023–0.0061) | 0.0048 (0.0009) | 18.9 | 0.0050 (0.0024–0.0060) | 0.8 |
| t½ (min) | 152.9 (43.1) | 28.4 | 137.5 (113.0–296.8) | 152.9 (43.1) | 28.2 | 139.2 (115.9–292.8) | 0.8 |
| CL/F (mL/min) | 50.1 (19.2) | 38.4 | 43.5 (18.3–79.5) | 44.0 (16.7) | 37.9 | 38.2 (19.1–79.0) | 0.3 |
| VD/F (mL) | 10,400 (3128) | 30.1 | 9880 (6086–15,433) | 9148 (2498) | 27.3 | 8093 (5644–13,824) | 0.3 |
AUC0− area-under-the-curve; AUC0− AUC0−t extrapolated to infinity; C maximum plasma concentration; CL/F apparent clearance; CV coefficient of variation; λ terminal elimination rate constant; μg micrograms; mg milligrams; min minutes; mL milliliters; n number of subjects; PK pharmacokinetic; PL-ASA pharmaceutical lipid-aspirin complex; SD standard deviation; t time of peak drug concentration; t first-order elimination half-life; V/F apparent volume of distribution
aN = 20 for all PK parameters
bP-value based on the Wilcoxon Rank-Sum test
Fig. 3Mean plasma acetylsalicylic acid concentration versus time. Plasma concentrations (log-linear scale) for acetylsalicylic acid are depicted after a single 650 mg dose of PL-ASA in the presence (fed, dotted line) and absence of food (fasting, solid line)