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Pharmacokinetics of a new testosterone transdermal delivery system, TDS ® ‐testosterone in healthy males
Author(s) -
Chik Z.,
Johnston A.,
Tucker A. T.,
Chew S. L.,
Michaels L.,
Alam C. A. S.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
british journal of clinical pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.216
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1365-2125
pISSN - 0306-5251
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2125.2005.02542.x
Subject(s) - testosterone (patch) , transdermal , bioequivalence , pharmacokinetics , placebo , confidence interval , chromatography , pharmacology , chemistry , medicine , endocrinology , alternative medicine , pathology
Aims The Transdermal Delivery System (TDS ® ) is a liquid formulation that can be applied to the skin via a metered pump spray to deliver drug to the systemic circulation. The aims of this study were to assess the ability of the TDS ® preparation to deliver testosterone systemically, and to characterize the pharmacokinetic profiles of the hormone in healthy males. Methods An open label, comparative, randomized placebo controlled study involving three treatments and three periods with a minimum of a 1 week washout period was conducted. Twelve healthy males received 50 mg TDS ® ‐testosterone, TDS ® ‐placebo, and 50 mg of a commercially available topical testosterone preparation (Androgel ® , 1% topical testosterone gel). Results The mean AUC(0,12 h) was higher following application of TDS ® ‐testosterone (61.8 ng ml −1 h), compared with Androgel ® (57.7 ng ml −1 h) and TDS ® ‐placebo (50.7 ng ml −1 h. The mean C max (0,12 h) was similar for TDS ® ‐testosterone (6.6 ng ml −1 ) and Androgel ® (6.5 ng ml −1 ) and these values were higher than those for TDS ® ‐placebo (5.7 ng ml −1 ). Analysis of variance showed that the 90% confidence intervals on the relative difference of the ratio for the AUC(0,12 h) and the C max (0,12 h) between TDS ® ‐testosterone and Androgel ® , were contained within the bioequivalence limit (80, 125%) ( C max 89.2, 112.3% and AUC 93.5, 120.5%). Serum testosterone concentrations were lower following TDS ® ‐Placebo and were not bioequivalent either to the gel or spray. Conclusions The TDS ® preparation was shown to deliver testosterone systemically to humans and the concentrations of the hormone in the 12 h following TDS ® administration were bioequivalent to an existing topical delivery gel.