1. Academic Validation
  2. Population pharmacokinetics of orally administrated bromopride: Focus on the absorption process

Population pharmacokinetics of orally administrated bromopride: Focus on the absorption process

  • Eur J Pharm Sci. 2020 Jan 15:142:105081. doi: 10.1016/j.ejps.2019.105081.
Larissa Lachi-Silva 1 Aline B Barth 1 Gustavo Mendes Lima Santos 2 Malidi Ahamadi 1 Marcos Luciano Bruschi 3 Elza Kimura 4 Bibiana Verlindo de Araújo 5 Andréa Diniz 6
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Pharmacokinetics and Biopharmaceutical Laboratory (PKBio), Pharmacy Departament, State University of Maringa, Maringá-PR, Brazil.
  • 2 Brazilian Health Survaillance Agency (ANVISA), Brasilia-DF, Brazil.
  • 3 Laboratory of Research and Development of Drug Delivery System (LABSLiF), Pharmacy Department, State University of Maringa, Maringá-PR, Brazil.
  • 4 Clinical Research and Bioequivalence Center (NPC-BIO), University Hospital, State University of Maringa, Maringá-PR, Brazil.
  • 5 Pharmaceutical Sciences Graduate Program, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre-RS, Brazil.
  • 6 Pharmacokinetics and Biopharmaceutical Laboratory (PKBio), Pharmacy Departament, State University of Maringa, Maringá-PR, Brazil. Electronic address: adiniz@uem.br.
Abstract

Bromopride is a prokinetic and antiemetic drug used to treat nausea and vomiting. Although its prescription is common in Brazil, there is a lack of studies about bromopride pharmacokinetics. Therefore, the aims of this study were to investigate the population pharmacokinetics of bromopride and to evaluate the influence of covariates on its absorption. This study is a retrospective analysis of data collected from bioequivalence studies. The data was modeled using MONOLIX 2018R2. Assuming one-compartment and linear elimination, the absorption phase was evaluated with different structural models. The model of sequential first- and zero-order with combined error and exponential inter-individual variability in all parameters best described the atypical absorption profile of bromopride. Population estimates were first-order absorption rate (ka) of 0.08 h - 1, fraction of dose absorbed by first-order (Fr) of 32.60%, duration of the zero-order absorption (Tk0) of 0.88 h with latency time (Tlag) of 0.47 h, volume of distribution of 230 l and clearance of 46.80 l h - 1. Bodyweight affects Tk0, dosage form was found to correlate with Tk0 and Tlag, while gender affects Tlag. However, simulations evaluating the clinical importance of these covariates on steady-state indicated minimal changes on bromopride exposure. The mixed absorption model was reasonable to describe the absorption process of bromopride because it had the flexibility to fit multiple-peaks profile and shows good agreement with physicochemical properties of drug.

Keywords

Absorption models; Bromopride; Model selection; Monolix; Nonlinear mixed-effects modeling; Solid dosage forms.

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