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PHARMACOKINETICS AND METABOLISM OF TESAGLITAZAR, A NOVEL DUAL-ACTING PEROXISOME PROLIFERATOR-ACTIVATED RECEPTOR α/γ AGONIST, AFTER A SINGLE ORAL AND INTRAVENOUS DOSE IN HUMANS

PHARMACOKINETICS AND METABOLISM OF TESAGLITAZAR, A NOVEL DUAL-ACTING PEROXISOME... Abstract The pharmacokinetics of tesaglitazar (GALIDA), a novel dual-acting peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor α and γ agonist, were studied in eight healthy male subjects. The subjects initially received either a single oral or intravenous (i.v.) dose of 1 mg of 14 Ctesaglitazar. After a washout period, they received 1 mg of nonlabeled tesaglitazar via the alternative administration route. Serial blood samples and complete urine and feces were collected until 336 h postdose. Tesaglitazar absorption was rapid, with maximum plasma concentration ( C max ) at ∼1 h postdose, and the absolute bioavailability was approximately 100%, suggesting no, or negligible, first-pass metabolism. Mean plasma clearance was 0.16 l/h and the volume of distribution at steady state was 9.1 liters. After either route of administration, the plasma concentration-time profiles of radioactivity and tesaglitazar were virtually identical, indicating low systemic metabolite concentrations and formation rate limitation of metabolite elimination. The elimination half-life of radioactivity and tesaglitazar was ∼45 h. Radioactivity recovery was complete in all subjects, with mean values of 99.9% (i.v.) and 99.6% (oral). Tesaglitazar was mainly metabolized before excretion, and most radioactivity (91%) was recovered in urine. Approximately 20% of the dose was recovered unchanged after either administration route, resulting in a renal clearance of 0.030 l/h. Most of the radioactivity in urine was identified as acyl glucuronide of tesaglitazar. Plasma protein binding of tesaglitazar was high (∼99.9%), and the mean blood-plasma partitioning ratio was 0.66, suggesting low affinity for red blood cells. There was no indication of partial inversion of the ( S )-enantiomer to the corresponding ( R )-form. Tesaglitazar was well tolerated. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Drug Metabolism and Disposition Am. Soc for Pharma & Experimental Therapeutics

PHARMACOKINETICS AND METABOLISM OF TESAGLITAZAR, A NOVEL DUAL-ACTING PEROXISOME PROLIFERATOR-ACTIVATED RECEPTOR α/γ AGONIST, AFTER A SINGLE ORAL AND INTRAVENOUS DOSE IN HUMANS

PHARMACOKINETICS AND METABOLISM OF TESAGLITAZAR, A NOVEL DUAL-ACTING PEROXISOME PROLIFERATOR-ACTIVATED RECEPTOR α/γ AGONIST, AFTER A SINGLE ORAL AND INTRAVENOUS DOSE IN HUMANS

Drug Metabolism and Disposition , Volume 32 (9): 923 – Sep 1, 2004

Abstract

Abstract The pharmacokinetics of tesaglitazar (GALIDA), a novel dual-acting peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor α and γ agonist, were studied in eight healthy male subjects. The subjects initially received either a single oral or intravenous (i.v.) dose of 1 mg of 14 Ctesaglitazar. After a washout period, they received 1 mg of nonlabeled tesaglitazar via the alternative administration route. Serial blood samples and complete urine and feces were collected until 336 h postdose. Tesaglitazar absorption was rapid, with maximum plasma concentration ( C max ) at ∼1 h postdose, and the absolute bioavailability was approximately 100%, suggesting no, or negligible, first-pass metabolism. Mean plasma clearance was 0.16 l/h and the volume of distribution at steady state was 9.1 liters. After either route of administration, the plasma concentration-time profiles of radioactivity and tesaglitazar were virtually identical, indicating low systemic metabolite concentrations and formation rate limitation of metabolite elimination. The elimination half-life of radioactivity and tesaglitazar was ∼45 h. Radioactivity recovery was complete in all subjects, with mean values of 99.9% (i.v.) and 99.6% (oral). Tesaglitazar was mainly metabolized before excretion, and most radioactivity (91%) was recovered in urine. Approximately 20% of the dose was recovered unchanged after either administration route, resulting in a renal clearance of 0.030 l/h. Most of the radioactivity in urine was identified as acyl glucuronide of tesaglitazar. Plasma protein binding of tesaglitazar was high (∼99.9%), and the mean blood-plasma partitioning ratio was 0.66, suggesting low affinity for red blood cells. There was no indication of partial inversion of the ( S )-enantiomer to the corresponding ( R )-form. Tesaglitazar was well tolerated.

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Publisher
Am. Soc for Pharma & Experimental Therapeutics
Copyright
Copyright © Drug Metabolism and Disposition
ISSN
0090-9556
eISSN
1521-009X
Publisher site

Abstract

Abstract The pharmacokinetics of tesaglitazar (GALIDA), a novel dual-acting peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor α and γ agonist, were studied in eight healthy male subjects. The subjects initially received either a single oral or intravenous (i.v.) dose of 1 mg of 14 Ctesaglitazar. After a washout period, they received 1 mg of nonlabeled tesaglitazar via the alternative administration route. Serial blood samples and complete urine and feces were collected until 336 h postdose. Tesaglitazar absorption was rapid, with maximum plasma concentration ( C max ) at ∼1 h postdose, and the absolute bioavailability was approximately 100%, suggesting no, or negligible, first-pass metabolism. Mean plasma clearance was 0.16 l/h and the volume of distribution at steady state was 9.1 liters. After either route of administration, the plasma concentration-time profiles of radioactivity and tesaglitazar were virtually identical, indicating low systemic metabolite concentrations and formation rate limitation of metabolite elimination. The elimination half-life of radioactivity and tesaglitazar was ∼45 h. Radioactivity recovery was complete in all subjects, with mean values of 99.9% (i.v.) and 99.6% (oral). Tesaglitazar was mainly metabolized before excretion, and most radioactivity (91%) was recovered in urine. Approximately 20% of the dose was recovered unchanged after either administration route, resulting in a renal clearance of 0.030 l/h. Most of the radioactivity in urine was identified as acyl glucuronide of tesaglitazar. Plasma protein binding of tesaglitazar was high (∼99.9%), and the mean blood-plasma partitioning ratio was 0.66, suggesting low affinity for red blood cells. There was no indication of partial inversion of the ( S )-enantiomer to the corresponding ( R )-form. Tesaglitazar was well tolerated.

Journal

Drug Metabolism and DispositionAm. Soc for Pharma & Experimental Therapeutics

Published: Sep 1, 2004

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