| Literature DB >> 35335999 |
Rakshit S Tanna1, James T Nguyen1, Deena L Hadi1,2, Preston K Manwill3, Laura Flores-Bocanegra3, Matthew E Layton4, John R White5, Nadja B Cech2,3, Nicholas H Oberlies2,3, Allan E Rettie2,6, Kenneth E Thummel2,7, Mary F Paine1,2.
Abstract
Increasing use of the botanical kratom to self-manage opioid withdrawal and pain has led to increased kratom-linked overdose deaths. Despite these serious safety concerns, rigorous fundamental pharmacokinetic knowledge of kratom in humans remains lacking. We assessed the pharmacokinetics of a single low dose (2 g) of a well-characterized kratom product administered orally to six healthy participants. Median concentration-time profiles for the kratom alkaloids examined were best described by a two-compartment model with central elimination. Pronounced pharmacokinetic differences between alkaloids with the 3S configuration (mitragynine, speciogynine, paynantheine) and alkaloids with the 3R configuration (mitraciliatine, speciociliatine, isopaynantheine) were attributed to differences in apparent intercompartmental distribution clearance, volumes of distribution, and clearance. Based on noncompartmental analysis of individual concentration-time profiles, the 3S alkaloids exhibited a shorter median time to maximum concentration (1-2 vs. 2.5-4.5 h), lower area under the plasma concentration-time curve (430-490 vs. 794-5120 nM × h), longer terminal half-life (24-45 vs. ~12-18 h), and higher apparent volume of distribution during the terminal phase (960-12,700 vs. ~46-130 L) compared to the 3R alkaloids. Follow-up mechanistic in vitro studies suggested differential hepatic/intestinal metabolism, plasma protein binding, blood-to-plasma partitioning, and/or distribution coefficients may explain the pharmacokinetic differences between the two alkaloid types. This first comprehensive pharmacokinetic characterization of kratom alkaloids in humans provides the foundation for further research to establish safety and effectiveness of this emerging botanical product.Entities:
Keywords: botanicals; clinical trials; compartmental modeling; diastereomers; kratom; mitragynine; opioids; pharmacokinetics
Year: 2022 PMID: 35335999 PMCID: PMC8950611 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics14030620
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Structures of select indole alkaloids present in the kratom product (K51). Mitragynine, speciogynine, paynantheine, and 7-hydroxymitragynine have the 3S configuration, whereas speciociliatine and mitraciliatine have the 3R configuration. Mitragynine, speciociliatine, speciogynine, and mitraciliatine are a set of diastereomers. Paynantheine and isopaynantheine are a pair of diastereomers and differ from the other set by having a Δ18(19) double bond. 7-Hydroxymitragynine is a primary active metabolite of mitragynine.
Noncompartmental-analysis-derived pharmacokinetics of kratom alkaloids in healthy adult participants (n = 5 who completed the study) administered a well-characterized kratom product (2 g) as a tea.
| Alkaloid | Median (Range) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plasma | Urine | |||
|
| t1/2 (h) | 45.3 (31.9–50.2) | Ae (nmol) | 102 (78–134) |
| (19.48 ± 0.81) | tmax (h) | 1 (0.75–1.5) | fe | 0.0010 (0.0008–0.0013) |
| Cmax (nM) | 81.9 (50.1–177) | CLR (L/h) | 0.194 (0.129–0.291) | |
| AUC0–120h (nM×h) | 388 (300–1240) | |||
| AUCinf (nM×h) | 420 (324–1360) | |||
| Vz/F (L) | 12,700 (5190–19,700) | |||
| CL/F (L/h) | 233 (71.7–302) | |||
|
| t1/2 (h) | 23.5 (16.1–28.3) | Ae (nmol) | 258 (210–317) |
| (3.18 ± 0.13) | tmax (h) | 2 (1–3.5) | fe | 0.016 (0.013–0.020) |
| Cmax (nM) | 51.4 (34.2–121) | CLR (L/h) | 0.451 (0.282–0.723) | |
| AUC0–120h (nM×h) | 469 (368–1080) | |||
| AUCinf (nM×h) | 477 (379–1120) | |||
| Vz/F (L) | 962 (584–1235) | |||
| CL/F (L/h) | 33.5 (14.3–42.1) | |||
|
| t1/2 (h) | 17.8 (11.2–24.7) | Ae (nmol) | 586 (461–744) |
| (0.647 ± 0.035) | tmax (h) | 4.5 (3.5–6.5) | fe | 0.18 (0.14–0.23) |
| Cmax (nM) | 73.5 (34.9–98.6) | CLR (L/h) | 0.361 (0.271–0.481) | |
| AUC0–120h (nM×h) | 1160 (1030–3460) | |||
| AUCinf (nM×h) | 1160 (1040–3520) | |||
| Vz/F (L) | 46.0 (26.2–74.0) | |||
| CL/F (L/h) | 2.78 (0.92–3.11) | |||
|
| t1/2 (h) | 12.3 (10.4–21.1) | Ae (nmol) | 2350 (1920–2870) |
| (5.12 ± 0.26) | tmax (h) | 2.5 (1–3.5) | fe | 0.091 (0.075–0.11) |
| Cmax (nM) | 308 (154–380) | CLR (L/h) | 0.482 (0.327–0.709) | |
| AUC0–120h (nM×h) | 5110 (3190–7550) | |||
| AUCinf (nM×h) | 5120 (3200–7560) | |||
| Vz/F (L) | 130 (60.1–159) | |||
| CL/F (L/h) | 5.01 (3.40–8.04) | |||
|
| t1/2 (h) | 27.0 (17.7–30.8) | Ae (nmol) | 101 (81.9–124) |
| (5.86 ± 0.26) | tmax (h) | 1 (0.75–2.5) | fe | 0.0034 (0.0028–0.0042) |
| Cmax (nM) | 61.1 (56.4–157) | CLR (L/h) | 0.185 (0.115–0.296) | |
| AUC0–120h (nM×h) | 428 (383–917) | |||
| AUCinf (nM×h) | 438 (389–956) | |||
| Vz/F (L) | 1940 (1370–2620) | |||
| CL/F (L/h) | 67.4 (30.9–76.0) | |||
|
| t1/2 (h) | 14.4 (11.8–20.9) | Ae (nmol) | 269 (226–320) |
| (0.512 ± 0.010) | tmax (h) | 4.5 (2.5–6.5) | fe | 0.10 (0.087–0.12) |
| Cmax (nM) | 48.8 (26.2–68.2) | CLR (L/h) | 0.262 (0.172–0.401) | |
| AUC0–120h (nM×h) | 784 (662–2040) | |||
| AUCinf (nM×h) | 794 (667–2130) | |||
| Vz/F (L) | 55.5 (36.6–76.0) | |||
| CL/F (L/h) | 3.25 (1.21–3.87) | |||
|
| t1/2 (h) | 5.67 (5.03–6.52) | Ae (nmol) a | 179 (120–268) |
| (< LOQ) | tmax (h) | 1 (0.75–2.5) | fe | NA |
| Cmax (nM) | 16.1 (11.9–22.2) | CLR (L/h) | 2.03 (1.57–2.63) | |
| AUC0–120h (nM×h) | 103 (57.5–120) | |||
| AUCinf (nM×h) | 106 (60.8–126) | |||
| Cmax,m/Cmax,p | 0.27 (0.07–0.28) | |||
| AUCinf,m/AUCinf,p | 0.24 (0.07–0.29) | |||
t1/2, terminal half-life; Cmax, maximum plasma concentration; tmax, time to reach Cmax; AUC0–120h, area under the plasma-concentration time curve from time zero to 120 h; AUCinf, area under the plasma-concentration time curve from time zero to time infinity; Vz/F, apparent volume of distribution during the terminal phase; CL/F, oral clearance; Ae,0–120h, cumulative amount excreted unchanged in the urine from time zero to 120 h; fe, fraction of amount of kratom alkaloid measured in 2 g of K51 powder excreted unchanged in the urine; CLR, renal clearance; Cmax,m/Cmax,p, 7-hydroxymitragynine-to-mitragynine Cmax ratio; AUCinf,m/AUCinf,p, 7-hydroxymitragynine-to-mitragynine AUCinf ratio; a calculated based on unhydrolyzed urine data; LOQ, limit of quantification; NA, not applicable.
Figure 2Representative chromatograms for simultaneous quantification of kratom alkaloids in human plasma. (a) Total ion chromatogram (TIC) of reference standards depicting separation of alkaloids with the same MRM transitions (diastereomers). (b) TIC of a representative human plasma sample 1-h post-kratom tea administration. (c) Extracted ion chromatogram (415 > 190) depicting 7-hydroxymitragynine and other products.
Figure 3Plasma concentration-time profiles for (a) mitragynine, mitragynine diastereomers, and 7-hydroxymitragynine and (b) paynantheine and isopaynantheine following oral administration of a well-characterized kratom product as a tea to six participants. Kratom tea was prepared with 2 g of yellow Indonesian Micro Powder (K51) in 240 mL of hot water (80 °C), which was allowed to steep for three minutes. A sugar packet (4 g) was added to improve palatability. The prepared tea was cooled to 50 °C before administration to the participants. Symbols and error bars denote geometric means and 90% confidence intervals, respectively. Insets show the 0–24 h profiles to better visualize alkaloid concentrations during the intensive sampling period after administration of the kratom tea.
Figure 4Schematic illustration of the two-compartment model with first-order input and elimination rate used to describe the median concentration-time profiles of all kratom alkaloids. Compartments 1 and 2 represent the central and peripheral compartments, respectively. The model was parameterized with the microconstants k01, k12, k21, and k10; k01 (or kabs) is the rate constant for absorption into the central compartment constant, k12 and k21 are the intercompartmental distribution rate constants, and k10 is the rate constant for loss from the central compartment.
Compartmental model-derived pharmacokinetic estimates of kratom alkaloids in healthy adult participants (n = 5 who completed the study) administered a well-characterized kratom product (2 g) as a tea.
| Metric | Mitragynine | Speciogynine | Paynantheine | Mitraciliatine | Speciociliatine | Isopaynantheine |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estimate (Standard Error) | ||||||
|
| 1170 (105) | 157 (43.6) | 329 (37.2) | 35.5 (15.9) | 75.1 (10.2) | 47.8 (8.41) |
|
| 4.10 (1.16) | 0.970 (0.352) | 2.69 (0.691) | 0.706 (0.4) | 1.31 (0.321) | 1.17 (0.341) |
|
| 227 (8.11) | 32.7 (1.38) | 62.9 (2.54) | 2.44 (0.136) | 5.16 (0.233) | 3.07 (0.154) |
|
| 5620 (524) | 468 (42.9) | 895 (79.1) | 18.6 (14.5) | 19.8 (10.7) | 12.8 (8.28) |
|
| 213 (20.7) | 33.9 (5.93) | 54.7 (7.63) | 2.59 (3.73) | 2.11 (2.18) | 1.38 (1.96) |
|
| 0.49 (0.004) | 0.48 (0.004) | 0.49 (0.004) | 0.42 (0.018) | 0.45 (0.010) | 0.45 (0.011) |
|
| 431 (15.4) | 488 (20.6) | 470 (19) | 1320 (73.7) | 4980 (225) | 842 (42.3) |
|
| 1.76 (0.163) | 1.5 (0.47) | 1.78 (0.244) | 2.88 (3.13) | 4.42 (2.72) | 4.41 (4.17) |
|
| 37.3 (3.32) | 21.3 (1.58) | 23 (1.85) | 17.5 (1.43) | 14.8 (1.13) | 15.7 (2.52) |
|
| 0.194 (0.0156) | 0.208 (0.055) | 0.192 (0.0197) | 0.0688 (0.0308) | 0.0686 (0.001) | 0.0642 (0.0119) |
|
| 0.182 (0.0228) | 0.215 (0.0871) | 0.166 (0.033) | 0.0728 (0.136) | 0.0281 (0.0323) | 0.0289 (0.0455) |
|
| 0.0379 (0.0045) | 0.072 (0.0109) | 0.0611 (0.0085) | 0.139 (0.106) | 0.107 (0.0613) | 0.108 (0.103) |
|
| 1.13 (0.111) | 2.03 (0.143) | 1.36 (0.121) | 3.45 (0.335) | 2.63 (0.23) | 2.84 (0.267) |
|
| 65.6 (4.22) | 53.8 (3.28) | 66.2 (4.37) | 62.2 (4.96) | 279 (17.1) | 43.6 (3.05) |
V1/F, apparent central volume of distribution; k01, rate constant for absorption into the central compartment; CL/F, oral clearance; V2/F, apparent peripheral volume of distribution; CLD/F, apparent intercompartmental distributional clearance; tlag, lag time; AUC, area under the plasma concentration-time profile; t1/2,α, half-life of early (“distribution”) phase; t1/2,β, half-life of terminal phase; k10, elimination rate constant for loss from the central compartment; k12, intercompartmental distribution rate constant from the central to the peripheral compartment; k21, intercompartmental distribution rate constant from the peripheral to the central compartment; tmax, time to reach Cmax; Cmax, maximum plasma concentration.
Figure 5(a) Total amount of kratom alkaloids excreted in urine (Ae,total) after kratom tea administration over a 120 h collection period. (b) Fraction of the administered dose excreted unchanged in the urine (fe) from 0–120 h. (c) Renal clearance (CLR) of kratom alkaloids. Symbols denote individual data points for the five participants who completed the study. Horizontal lines denote geometric means. Error bars denote 95% confidence intervals.
In vitro metabolism, protein binding, and blood-to-plasma concentration ratio data for kratom alkaloids.
| Alkaloid | t1/2,HIMs | t1/2,HLMs | fu,p | fu,mic | CB/CP | CLint,H | CLH,u |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mitragynine | 45.9 ± 0.8 | 10.1 ± 0.2 | 0.039 ± 0.003 | 0.536 ± 0.003 | 0.93 ± 0.02 | 31.0 | 1.22 |
| Speciogynine | 41.7 ± 1.3 | 9.6 ± 0.1 | 0.057 ± 0.001 | 0.602 ± 0.009 | 0.65 ± 0.02 | 32.6 | 2.53 |
| Mitraciliatine | 45.6 ± 3.4 | 15.5 ± 0.2 | 0.019 ± 0.003 | 0.337 ± 0.006 | 1.05 ± 0.01 | 20.2 | 0.49 |
| Speciociliatine | >60 | 26.2 ± 0.4 | 0.040 ± 0.003 | 0.509 ± 0.012 | 0.74 ± 0.04 | 11.9 | 0.61 |
| Paynantheine | 29.9 ± 0.3 | 7.5 ± 0.3 | 0.055 ± 0.005 | 0.516 ± 0.016 | 0.75 ± 0.01 | 41.9 | 2.67 |
| Isopaynantheine | 53.5 ± 2.9 | 14.7 ± 0.2 | 0.024 ± 0.002 | 0.412 ± 0.004 | 0.66 ± 0.02 | 21.2 | 0.73 |
Values represent means ± S.D. of triplicate determinations. t1/2, in vitro half-life; HIMs, human intestinal microsomes; HLMs, human liver microsomes; fu,p, unbound fraction in plasma; fu,mic, unbound fraction in microsomal incubation; CB/CP, blood-to-plasma concentration ratio; CLint,H, in vitro hepatic intrinsic clearance; CLH,u, predicted unbound hepatic clearance using the well-stirred model (see Supplemental Materials for details).
Figure 6NADPH-dependent depletion of each kratom alkaloid (1 µM) incubated with human (a) intestinal and (b) liver microsomes (0.5 mg/mL) at 37 °C. Symbols denote means of triplicate incubations, which varied less than 15%. Error bars are not shown for visualization purposes. Lines denote linear regression (R2 > 0.9) of the data, and negative slopes indicate in vitro rate of elimination (ke). The 60 min timepoint for paynantheine in (b) is not shown to allow direct comparison between (a,b) using a common scale. The ke was estimated using all data points.