Literature DB >> 33426619

Determination and Comparison of the Solubility, Oil-Water Partition Coefficient, Intestinal Absorption, and Biliary Excretion of Carvedilol Enantiomers.

Qi Zhang1,2, Xin Wang1, Hongjiao Xue1, Baolin Huang1, Zimin Lin1, Zheng Cai3.   

Abstract

Carvedilol is administered as a racemic mixture for the therapy of hypertension and heart failure. S-enantiomer is the dominant conformation of pharmacodynamics, but its further development was obstructed by its poor bioavailability. In this study, carvedilol and its enantiomers were compared in terms of solubility, permeability, and biliary excretion, and reasons for the poor bioavailability were discussed. Equilibrium solubility and log P were measured by a shake flask method at a wide pH range (1.2-8.0), and intestinal absorption and biliary excretion were evaluated using a single-pass rat intestinal perfusion model. According to BCS guidance, carvedilol and its R/S enantiomers are considered highly soluble at pH value less than 5.0 and low soluble at neutral or weak alkaline conditions. RS-carvedilol showed significantly lower solubilities at pH 1.2-5.0 and higher solubilities at pH 6.0-8.0 than its enantiomers. In addition, carvedilol and its enantiomers possessed similar log P values at pH 1.2-8.0. High intestinal permeabilities of carvedilol and its enantiomers were observed, and S-carvedilol showed higher absorption than R-carvedilol and RS-carvedilol. The biliary excretion about two major metabolites, 1-hydroxycarvedilol O-glucuronide and 8-hydroxycarvedilol O-glucuronide, of RS-carvedilol, S-carvedilol, and R-carvedilol were 66.4%, 73.5%, and 54.3%, respectively. In conclusion, there are significant differences amongst carvedilol and its R/S enantiomers in terms of solubility, intestine absorption, and biliary excretion abilities. The first pass effect is the primary reasons for the low bioavailability of S-carvedilol. Therefore, pharmaceutical strategies or parenteral routes should be considered to avoid the first pass metabolism.

Entities:  

Keywords:  biliary excretion; carvedilol; enantiomer; intestinal absorption; solubility

Year:  2021        PMID: 33426619     DOI: 10.1208/s12249-020-01906-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AAPS PharmSciTech        ISSN: 1530-9932            Impact factor:   3.246


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