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Lack of Male-Female Differences in Disposition and Esterase Hydrolysis of Ramipril to Ramiprilat in Healthy Volunteers after a Single Oral Dose

The objective of this study was to identify differences in disposition and esterase hydrolysis of ramipril between male and female volunteers. Plasma concentration and area under the concentration-time curve until the last measured concentration (AUCt) data of ramipril and its active metabolite rami...

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Autores principales: Vree, Tom B., Dammers, Erik, Ulc, Ivan, Horkovics-Kovats, Stefan, Ryska, Miroslav, Merkx, IJsbrand
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: TheScientificWorldJOURNAL 2003
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5974869/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29887764
http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2003.122
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author Vree, Tom B.
Dammers, Erik
Ulc, Ivan
Horkovics-Kovats, Stefan
Ryska, Miroslav
Merkx, IJsbrand
author_facet Vree, Tom B.
Dammers, Erik
Ulc, Ivan
Horkovics-Kovats, Stefan
Ryska, Miroslav
Merkx, IJsbrand
author_sort Vree, Tom B.
collection PubMed
description The objective of this study was to identify differences in disposition and esterase hydrolysis of ramipril between male and female volunteers. Plasma concentration and area under the concentration-time curve until the last measured concentration (AUCt) data of ramipril and its active metabolite ramiprilat (-diacid) were obtained from a randomised, cross-over bioequivalence study in 36 subjects (18 females and 18 males). Participants received a single 5-mg oral dose of two different formulations of ramipril (Formulation I and II). Plasma ramipril and ramiprilat concentrations were determined according to validated methods involving liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. A total number of 2 × 34 available plasma concentration-time curves of both the parent drug and the metabolite could be analysed, and variations (50—100% coefficient of variation [CV]) in plasma concentrations of both parent drug and metabolite were found. With both the formulations, the mean plasma concentrations-time curves of males and females were identical. The groups of female and male volunteers showed similar yields (AUCt = mg.h/L) of the metabolite ramiprilat (p = 0.37); however, females showed a higher AUCt/kg than males (p = 0.046). This difference was solely attributed to the difference in body weight between males and females (p = 0.00049). In both male and female groups, a subject-dependent yield of active metabolite ramiprilat was demonstrated, which was independent of the formulation.There is a large variation in the ramiprilat t(1/2β) (50—60% CV). There is a group of subjects who showed a t(1/2β) of approximately 80 h (15% CV), and two apparent groups with a longer t(1/2β)for each formulation (124 h, 22.5% CV; 166 h, 21.6% CV, respectively, p = 0.0013). This variation in the terminal half-life of ramiprilat is not sex related. In all three groups of half-lives, the corresponding Cmax values (mean ± SD) of ramiprilat in males and females were identical. Thus, with identical C(max) and half-lives, the difference found in the AUC(t) /kg of ramiprilat must be due to the difference in dose, as the consequence of the difference in body weight, following a standard dose of 5 mg in both males and females.This study showed clearly that despite subject-dependent hydrolysis of ramipril to the active metabolite ramiprilat, the variability in the rate of hydrolysis between males and females is similar. With a fixed dose (5 mg), females received a higher dose/kg than males and consequently showed a higher AUC(t)/kg of the active metabolite ramiprilat.
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spelling pubmed-59748692018-06-10 Lack of Male-Female Differences in Disposition and Esterase Hydrolysis of Ramipril to Ramiprilat in Healthy Volunteers after a Single Oral Dose Vree, Tom B. Dammers, Erik Ulc, Ivan Horkovics-Kovats, Stefan Ryska, Miroslav Merkx, IJsbrand ScientificWorldJournal Research Article The objective of this study was to identify differences in disposition and esterase hydrolysis of ramipril between male and female volunteers. Plasma concentration and area under the concentration-time curve until the last measured concentration (AUCt) data of ramipril and its active metabolite ramiprilat (-diacid) were obtained from a randomised, cross-over bioequivalence study in 36 subjects (18 females and 18 males). Participants received a single 5-mg oral dose of two different formulations of ramipril (Formulation I and II). Plasma ramipril and ramiprilat concentrations were determined according to validated methods involving liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. A total number of 2 × 34 available plasma concentration-time curves of both the parent drug and the metabolite could be analysed, and variations (50—100% coefficient of variation [CV]) in plasma concentrations of both parent drug and metabolite were found. With both the formulations, the mean plasma concentrations-time curves of males and females were identical. The groups of female and male volunteers showed similar yields (AUCt = mg.h/L) of the metabolite ramiprilat (p = 0.37); however, females showed a higher AUCt/kg than males (p = 0.046). This difference was solely attributed to the difference in body weight between males and females (p = 0.00049). In both male and female groups, a subject-dependent yield of active metabolite ramiprilat was demonstrated, which was independent of the formulation.There is a large variation in the ramiprilat t(1/2β) (50—60% CV). There is a group of subjects who showed a t(1/2β) of approximately 80 h (15% CV), and two apparent groups with a longer t(1/2β)for each formulation (124 h, 22.5% CV; 166 h, 21.6% CV, respectively, p = 0.0013). This variation in the terminal half-life of ramiprilat is not sex related. In all three groups of half-lives, the corresponding Cmax values (mean ± SD) of ramiprilat in males and females were identical. Thus, with identical C(max) and half-lives, the difference found in the AUC(t) /kg of ramiprilat must be due to the difference in dose, as the consequence of the difference in body weight, following a standard dose of 5 mg in both males and females.This study showed clearly that despite subject-dependent hydrolysis of ramipril to the active metabolite ramiprilat, the variability in the rate of hydrolysis between males and females is similar. With a fixed dose (5 mg), females received a higher dose/kg than males and consequently showed a higher AUC(t)/kg of the active metabolite ramiprilat. TheScientificWorldJOURNAL 2003-12-11 /pmc/articles/PMC5974869/ /pubmed/29887764 http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2003.122 Text en Copyright © 2003 Tom B. Vree et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Vree, Tom B.
Dammers, Erik
Ulc, Ivan
Horkovics-Kovats, Stefan
Ryska, Miroslav
Merkx, IJsbrand
Lack of Male-Female Differences in Disposition and Esterase Hydrolysis of Ramipril to Ramiprilat in Healthy Volunteers after a Single Oral Dose
title Lack of Male-Female Differences in Disposition and Esterase Hydrolysis of Ramipril to Ramiprilat in Healthy Volunteers after a Single Oral Dose
title_full Lack of Male-Female Differences in Disposition and Esterase Hydrolysis of Ramipril to Ramiprilat in Healthy Volunteers after a Single Oral Dose
title_fullStr Lack of Male-Female Differences in Disposition and Esterase Hydrolysis of Ramipril to Ramiprilat in Healthy Volunteers after a Single Oral Dose
title_full_unstemmed Lack of Male-Female Differences in Disposition and Esterase Hydrolysis of Ramipril to Ramiprilat in Healthy Volunteers after a Single Oral Dose
title_short Lack of Male-Female Differences in Disposition and Esterase Hydrolysis of Ramipril to Ramiprilat in Healthy Volunteers after a Single Oral Dose
title_sort lack of male-female differences in disposition and esterase hydrolysis of ramipril to ramiprilat in healthy volunteers after a single oral dose
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5974869/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29887764
http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2003.122
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