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Physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling framework for quantitative prediction of an herb-drug interaction
- Source :
- CPT: Pharmacometrics & Systems Pharmacology
- Publication Year :
- 2013
-
Abstract
- Herb-drug interaction predictions remain challenging. Physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling was used to improve prediction accuracy of potential herb-drug interactions using the semipurified milk thistle preparation, silibinin, as an exemplar herbal product. Interactions between silibinin constituents and the probe substrates warfarin (CYP2C9) and midazolam (CYP3A) were simulated. A low silibinin dose (160 mg/day × 14 days) was predicted to increase midazolam area under the curve (AUC) by 1%, which was corroborated with external data; a higher dose (1,650 mg/day × 7 days) was predicted to increase midazolam and (S)-warfarin AUC by 5% and 4%, respectively. A proof-of-concept clinical study confirmed minimal interaction between high-dose silibinin and both midazolam and (S)-warfarin (9 and 13% increase in AUC, respectively). Unexpectedly, (R)-warfarin AUC decreased (by 15%), but this is unlikely to be clinically important. Application of this PBPK modeling framework to other herb-drug interactions could facilitate development of guidelines for quantitative prediction of clinically relevant interactions.CPT Pharmacometrics Syst. Pharmacol. (2014) 3, e107; doi:10.1038/psp.2013.69; advance online publication 26 March 2014.
- Subjects :
- Physiologically based pharmacokinetic modelling
business.industry
CYP3A
Pharmacokinetic modeling
Area under the curve
Silibinin
Pharmacology
030226 pharmacology & pharmacy
03 medical and health sciences
chemistry.chemical_compound
0302 clinical medicine
chemistry
Pharmacokinetics
030220 oncology & carcinogenesis
Modeling and Simulation
Medicine
Midazolam
Pharmacology (medical)
heterocyclic compounds
Original Article
business
CYP2C9
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 21638306
- Volume :
- 3
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- CPT: pharmacometricssystems pharmacology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....33a1fef3be01f9c9dd40c60e930c8422