1. Academic Validation
  2. Pharmacokinetic interaction between warfarin and a uricosuric agent, bucolome: application of In vitro approaches to predicting In vivo reduction of (S)-warfarin clearance

Pharmacokinetic interaction between warfarin and a uricosuric agent, bucolome: application of In vitro approaches to predicting In vivo reduction of (S)-warfarin clearance

  • Drug Metab Dispos. 1999 Oct;27(10):1179-86.
H Takahashi 1 T Kashima S Kimura N Murata T Takaba K Iwade T Abe H Tainaka T Yasumori a H Echizen
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Pharmacotherapy, Meiji Pharmaceutical University, Tokyo, Japan.
PMID: 10497145
Abstract

A uricosuric agent, bucolome, has been shown to intensify the anticoagulant effect of warfarin. The aims of the present study were to clarify its mechanism(s) and to apply in vitro approaches for predicting this potentially life-threatening in vivo interaction. An in vivo study revealed that Japanese patients given warfarin with bucolome (300 mg/day, n = 21) showed a 1.5-fold greater international normalized ratio than those given warfarin alone (n = 34) despite that the former received a 58% smaller warfarin dose than the latter. Enantioselective assays revealed that bucolome increased plasma unbound fractions of (S)- and (R)-warfarin by 2-fold (p <.01), reduced unbound oral clearances of (S)- and (R)-warfarin by 84 (p <.01) and 26% (p <.05), respectively, and inhibited the unbound formation clearance for (S)-warfarin 7-hydroxylation by 89% (p <.01). In contrast, bucolome elicited no appreciable changes in the plasma unbound (S)-warfarin concentration versus the international normalized ratio relationship. In vitro studies with recombinant human cytochrome P-450 2C9 and liver microsomes showed that bucolome was a potent mixed-type inhibitor for (S)-warfarin 7-hydroxylation, with K(i) of 8.2 and 20.2 microM, respectively. An in vitro model incorporating maximum unbound bucolome concentration in the liver estimated as a sum of hepatic artery and portal vein concentrations and in vitro K(i) made an acceptable prediction for bucolome-induced reductions in in vivo total (bound + unbound) oral clearance, unbound oral clearance, and unbound formation clearance for (S)-warfarin. In conclusion, the augmented anticoagulant effect of warfarin by bucolome due to the metabolic inhibition for pharmacologically more potent (S)-warfarin may be predictable from in vitro data.

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