Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Full description
The human hepatic cytochrome P450 2B6 (CYP2B6) is a key enzyme in the metabolism of a growing list of clinically important drugs, environmental chemicals (e.g. toxicants and carcinogens) and endogenous substances. The expression and activity of this enzyme varies widely among individuals, probably due to genetic polymorphisms in the CYP2B6 gene and drug interactions. This variability, in turn, likely contributes to variable response to those drugs primarily metabolized by CYP2B6. In deed, several drugs that are substrates of CYP2B6 exhibit large pharmacokinetic differences among individuals and their use is associated with unpredictable drug interactions. Therefore, identifying mechanisms and factors that might influence CYP2B6 activity is important to the safe and effective use of its substrates. An important characteristic of several clinically important CYP2B6 substrate drugs that include efavirenz, nevirapine, cyclophosphamide, artemisinin and ifosfamide is their ability to enhance their own clearance upon repeated dosing, a process known as autoinduction of metabolism. Drugs that autoinduce metabolism also exhibit multiple interactions with drug metabolizing enzymes other than CYP2B6 (e.g. CYP3A, CYP2C9 and CYP2C19), and drug transporters (e.g. p-glycoprotein). As most of these medications are used in combination with other drugs, their potential to alter the pharmacokinetics of co-administered drugs is very high. We hypothesize that CYP2B6 genetic variants that influence constitutive CYP2B6 expression and activity contribute to interindividual variability in steady-state exposure of the autoinducer drugs and in the drug interactions that ensue. We will determine the impact of CYP2B6 genetic variants, typically the CYP2B6*6 allele, on the time-course and extent of autoinduction of metabolism and the consequences of differential autoinduction on drug interactions, using efavirenz (a known CYP2B6 substrate and an autoinducer) as a model drug. Thus, single (600 mg oral dose) and steady-state (600 mg/day) pharmacokinetics of efavirenz will be assessed in healthy subjects genotyped for the CYP2B6*6 allele. Trough concentrations of efavirenz and its metabolites will be collected during the course of efavirenz treatment. Efavirenz exposure will be compared between the genotypes after autoinduction. An autoinduction pharmacokinetic model will be developed to characterize the dynamics and time courses of autoinduction in the different genotypes. The potential impact of differences in efavirenz exposure on drug interactions will be determined by measuring the in vivo activity of selected CYP enzymes, using isoform specific substrate probes [omeprazole (CYP2C19), tolbutamide (CYP2C9), caffeine (CYP1A2) and midazolam (CYP3A)] at single and after multiple (steady-state) dosing with efavirenz.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
73 participants in 3 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal