z-logo
Premium
Effect of blueberry juice on clearance of buspirone and flurbiprofen in human volunteers
Author(s) -
Hanley Michael J.,
Masse Gina,
Harmatz Jerold S.,
Cancalon Paul F.,
Dolnikowski Gregory G.,
Court Michael H.,
Greenblatt David J.
Publication year - 2013
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.1365-2125.2012.04450.x
Subject(s) - pharmacology , cyp3a , chemistry , flurbiprofen , buspirone , pharmacokinetics , cyp2c9 , cyp3a4 , oral administration , grapefruit juice , area under the curve , metabolite , active metabolite , microsome , cytochrome p450 , in vitro , medicine , biochemistry , metabolism , receptor , agonist
Aim The present study evaluated the possibility of drug interactions involving blueberry juice ( BBJ ) and substrate drugs whose clearance is dependent on cytochromes P4503A ( CYP3A ) and P4502C9 ( CYP2C9 ). Methods A 50:50 mixture of lowbush and highbush BBJ was evaluated in vitro as an inhibitor of CYP3A activity (hydroxylation of triazolam and dealkylation of buspirone) and of CYP2C9 activity (flurbiprofen hydroxylation) using human liver microsomes. In clinical studies, clearance of oral buspirone and oral flurbiprofen was studied in healthy volunteers with and without co‐treatment with BBJ . Results BBJ inhibited CYP3A and CYP2C9 activity in vitro , with 50% inhibitory concentrations ( I C 50 ) of less than 2%, but without evidence of mechanism‐based (irreversible) inhibition. Grapefruit juice ( GFJ ) also inhibited CYP3A activity, but inhibitory potency was increased by pre‐incubation, consistent with mechanism‐based inhibition. In clinical studies, GFJ significantly increased area under the plasma concentration−time curve ( AUC ) for the CYP3A substrate buspirone. The geometric mean ratio ( GMR = AUC with GFJ divided by AUC with water) was 2.12. In contrast, the effect of BBJ ( GMR = 1.39) was not significant. In the study of flurbiprofen ( CYP2C9 substrate), the positive control inhibitor fluconazole significantly increased flurbiprofen AUC ( GMR = 1.71), but BBJ had no significant effect ( GMR = 1.03). Conclusion The increased buspirone AUC associated with BBJ is quantitatively small and could have occurred by chance. BBJ has no effect on flurbiprofen AUC . The studies provide no evidence for concern about clinically important pharmacokinetic drug interactions of BBJ with substrate drugs metabolized by CYP3A or CYP2C9 .

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here