3 research outputs found
Inhibition of cytochrome P450 2D6 metabolism of hydrocodone to hydromorphone does not importantly affect abuse liability
ABSTRACT Enzymatic conversion of hydrocodone to hydromorphone is catalyzed by cytochrome P450 2D6, which is inactive in about 7% of Caucasians [poor metabolizers (PMs)] and can be inhibited by quinidine pretreatment in the remainder [extensive metabolizers (EMs)]. If hydromorphone, having a substantially higher -receptor affinity than hydrocodone, contributes importantly to the physiological and subjective effects of oral hydrocodone, then PMs should be less responsive to the same doses, and quinidine pretreatment should cause EMs to temporarily respond as PMs. Seventeen EMs and 8 PMs who previously responded positively to hydromorphone s.c. received placebo and hydrocodone (10 mg, 15 mg and 22.5 mg p.o.) and were retested with their favorite dose after placebo or quinidine (100 mg) pretreatment; physiological and subjective measures were collected at base line and four times after drug administration, and urine was collected for 8 hr. EMs and PMs were equally responsive to oral hydrocodone, and quinidine had no consistent effect on their responses, even though quinidine abolished the pre-existing metabolic differences in hydromorphone production, as measured in urine. These data suggest only a small role of hydromorphone in eliciting abuserelated responses to oral hydrocodone. The genetic polymorphism of the drug-metabolizing enzyme CYP2D6 results in phenotypic differences in the pharmacokinetics of many drugs One drug for which there is evidence of phenotypic differences in response is codeine, which is O-demethylated by CYP2D6 to form morphine Hydrocodone differs structurally from codeine in that the C6-position is occupied by a keto-group, and thus the drug does not undergo the extensive conjugation (Ͼ60%) that codeine undergoe
Measuring In Vitro Biotransformation Rates of Super Hydrophobic Chemicals in Rat Liver S9 Fractions Using Thin-Film Sorbent-Phase Dosing
Methods for rapid and cost-effective assessment of the
biotransformation
potential of very hydrophobic and potentially bioaccumulative chemicals
in mammals are urgently needed for the ongoing global evaluation of
the environmental behavior of commercial chemicals. We developed and
tested a novel solvent-free, thin-film sorbent-phase in vitro dosing
system to measure the in vitro biotransformation rates of very hydrophobic
chemicals in male Sprague–Dawley rat liver S9 homogenates and
compared the rates to those measured by conventional solvent-delivery
dosing. The thin-film sorbent-phase dosing system using ethylene vinyl
acetate coated vials was developed to eliminate the incomplete dissolution
of very hydrophobic substances in largely aqueous liver homogenates,
to determine biotransformation rates at low substrate concentrations,
to measure the unbound fraction of substrate in solution, and to simplify
chemical analysis by avoiding the difficult extraction of test chemicals
from complex biological matrices. Biotransformation rates using sorbent-phase
dosing were 2-fold greater than those measured using solvent-delivery
dosing. Unbound concentrations of very hydrophobic test chemicals
were found to decline with increasing S9 and protein concentrations,
causing measured biotransformation rates to be independent of S9 or
protein concentrations. The results emphasize the importance of specifying
both protein content and unbound substrate fraction in the measurement
and reporting of in vitro biotransformation rates of very hydrophobic
substances, which can be achieved in a thin-film sorbent-phase dosing
system