| Literature DB >> 36015284 |
Louise Breuil1,2, Sébastien Goutal1, Solène Marie1,3, Antonio Del Vecchio4, Davide Audisio4, Amélie Soyer1, Maud Goislard1, Wadad Saba1, Nicolas Tournier1, Fabien Caillé1.
Abstract
Domperidone and metoclopramide are widely prescribed antiemetic drugs with distinct neurological side effects. The impact of P-glycoprotein (P-gp)-mediated efflux at the blood-brain barrier (BBB) on brain exposure and BBB permeation was compared in vitro and in vivo using positron emission tomography (PET) imaging in rats with the radiolabeled analogs [11C]domperidone and [11C]metoclopramide. In P-gp-overexpressing cells, the IC50 of tariquidar, a potent P-gp inhibitor, was drastically different using [11C]domperidone (221 nM [198-248 nM]) or [11C]metoclopramide (4 nM [2-8 nM]) as the substrate. Complete P-gp inhibition led to a 1.8-fold higher increase in the cellular uptake of [11C]domperidone compared with [11C]metoclopramide (p < 0.0001). Brain PET imaging revealed that the baseline brain exposure (AUCbrain) of [11C]metoclopramide was 2.4-fold higher compared with [11C]domperidone (p < 0.001), consistent with a 1.8-fold higher BBB penetration (AUCbrain/AUCplasma). The maximal increase in the brain exposure (2.9-fold, p < 0.0001) and BBB penetration (2.9-fold, p < 0.0001) of [11C]metoclopramide was achieved using 8 mg/kg of tariquidar. In comparison, neither 8 nor 15 mg/kg of tariquidar increased the brain exposure of [11C]domperidone (p > 0.05). Domperidone is an avid P-gp substrate that was in vitro compared with metoclopramide. Domperidone benefits from a lower brain exposure and a limited risk for P-gp-mediated drug-drug interaction involving P-gp inhibition at the BBB.Entities:
Keywords: ATP-binding cassette; P-glycoprotein; PET imaging; blood–brain barrier; drug–drug interaction; membrane transporter; neuropharmacology; pharmacokinetics; radiochemistry
Year: 2022 PMID: 36015284 PMCID: PMC9412994 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics14081658
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.525
Comparison of neurological side effects between domperidone and metoclopramide [4,5,6].
| Side Effects | Very Frequent | Frequent | Not Frequent | Rare | Unspecified |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Domperidone | dizziness, sleepiness, headache, extrapyramidal signs | restless legs syndrome | |||
| Metoclopramide | sleepiness | extrapyramidal signs, parkinsonian syndrome, akathisia | dystonia, dyskinesia, altered consciousness | convulsions | late dyskinesia, neuroleptic malignant syndrome |
Figure 1Radiosynthesis scheme of [11C]metoclopramide (A) and [11C]domperidone (B).
Figure 2In vitro transport data. Comparison of the in vitro half-maximum inhibitory concentration (IC50) (A) and uptake ratio (C) of [11C]domperidone and [11C]metoclopramide assessed using increasing doses of tariquidar (TQD) in MDCKII-MDR1 cells. In (B), concentration-inhibition curves (I%, extent of inhibition in percent) are shown. In (A), data are shown as mean ± CI95% (95% confidence interval) with n = 4 per condition. In (B,C), data are shown as mean ± S.D with n = 4 per condition. Lines in (B) represent fits of the employed Hill model. **** p < 0.0001, ns = non-significant (t-test for comparison).
Figure 3PET images were obtained with [11C]domperidone and [11C]metoclopramide after selected doses of the P-gp inhibitor tariquidar (TQD). Representative PET images are summed from 0 to 30 min and were obtained at baseline and after P-gp inhibition (8 mg/kg TQD for [11C]metoclopramide and 15 mg/kg TQD for [11C]domperidone).
Figure 4Impact of P-gp inhibition of the brain kinetics of [11C]domperidone compared to [11C]metoclopramide. Time-activity curves (TAC) were obtained with [11C]metoclopramide (A,B) and [11C]-domperidone (C,D) in the absence and presence of P-gp inhibitor tariquidar (TQD). (A,C) present the raw data in the brain, while (B,D) are the corresponding plasma TAC curves corrected from metabolism exposures. Data are reported as mean ± S.D with n = 4 per brain condition and n = 2 per plasma condition.
Figure 5Impact of P-gp inhibition of brain exposure and metabolism of [11C]domperidone compared to [11C]metoclopramide. In (A), brain exposures were obtained with [11C]domperidone and [11C]metoclopramide (AUCbrain) in the presence and absence of P-gp inhibitor tariquidar (TQD). In (B), respective parent fraction in plasma of radiotracer in same conditions. In (C), the corresponding Kp,brain/plasma are shown. Data are reported as mean ± S.D with n = 4 per condition. **** p < 0.0001, ns = non-significant (two-way ANOVA with Tukey’s post hoc test for multiple comparison).