Morbid Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Bioavailability of Paracetamol, Amoxicillin and Talinolol and Expression of Intestinal Drug Metabolizing Enzymes and Transport Proteins Before, Immediately and One Year After Proximal Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass Operation in Patients With Morbid Adipositas
The purpose of this study is to evaluate pharmacokinetics of paracetamol, amoxicillin and talinolol in morbid adipose subjects before as well as shortly after and about one year after proximal Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass (RYGB) and to measure messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) expression and protein content of duodenal and/or jejunal drug metabolizing enzymes (eg. cytochrome P450 isoenzyme 3A4 (CYP3A4), uridine diphosphoglucuronosyltransferase (UGTs)) and drug transport proteins (e.g. P-glycoprotein, MRP2, OATPB, PEPT) before and during the operation and about one year after proximal RYGB.
Intestinal drug absorption appears to be a very complex process characterized by
gastrointestinal transit, disintegration of dosage forms, drug dissolution within the
intestinal lumen, active and passive uptake processes, mucosal metabolism (e.g. by
cytochrome P450 (CYP), UGT, sulfotransferase (SULT) enzymes) and efflux transport by several
adenosine triphosphate binding cassette (ABC) transporters as P-glycoprotein, multidrug
resistance associated protein (MRP) 2 or breast cancer resistance protein (BCRP). Along the
gastrointestinal tract, the upper small intestine (i.e. duodenum, proximal jejunum)
represents the main site for absorption of nutrients and drugs offering an appropriately
large absorption area of nearly 200 m². Within this bowel segment, there is a high
expression of several physiological relevant uptake carriers for nutrients as carbohydrates
(e.g. GLUTs), fatty acids (MCTs, FATs), peptides (PEPTs), sterols (NPC1L1) and bile acids
(ASBT) which are exclusively located in the small intestine. Furthermore, it is now well
established that there is a high intestinal expression of phase I & II metabolizing enzymes
as well as drug efflux transporters being responsible for the high first-pass metabolism of
many compounds like cyclosporine, nifedipine, midazolam or statins. Apparently, there is a
distinct expression gradient along the small intestine (e.g. decreasing levels of P-gp and
CYP3A4 but increasing for MRP2). On the other side, the colon features only negligible
amounts of enzymes and active uptake and elimination carriers. Therefore, the extent of drug
absorption from the bowel is mainly dependent on the intestinal site of drug liberation and,
thus, dependent on the administered dosage form, the physicochemical properties of the drug
and the individual physiological conditions.
Due to the fact, that under physiological circumstances there is only a low expression of
P-gp in the upper parts of the gut (i.e. duodenum and jejunum), a functional "absorption
window" is created which enables the preferable absorption of drugs in these proximal region
of the small intestine. This is also supported by the markedly higher surface area of the
upper small intestine compared to distal segments. It was shown that cyclosporine and
talinolol were increasingly less absorbed when delivered into deeper regions of the human
intestine. Since both compounds are well established P-gp substrates, this site-dependent
absorption phenomenon seems to be caused by the decreasing expression levels of intestinal
P-gp counteracting drug uptake into enterocytes. Additionally, it was reported that the
effective permeability of atenolol, metoprolol, cimetidine and furosemide was markedly lower
in the ileum compared to the jejunum in healthy subjects. These data verified that drug
absorption in the lower intestine is less effective than in upper parts which seems to be of
outstanding relevance for compounds with predominately duodenal and jejunal absorption (fast
release dosage form) and P-gp substrates as ß-lactam antibiotics, furosemide, cyclosporine,
talinolol and digoxin.
Consequently, in subjects after massive dissection of the proximal small intestine or after
Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery, absence of this main intestinal absorption area leads to
malabsorption of nutrients (e.g. protein, fat soluble vitamins, minerals and trace elements
as iron) and is expected to affect the oral bioavailability of drugs with "absorption
window" in the proximal small intestine.
Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery, by which the stomach, the duodenum and parts of the
jejunum are dislocated from the continuous intestinal passage of the chyme, is the surgical
gold standard option to treat morbid adipositas. The method was shown to reduce
significantly body weight and obesity-related co-morbidity. Today, this surgical
intervention is the most frequently used bariatric surgery (USA: approximately 150.000/year)
and its application is still increasing.
Despite its widely use and the well documented risk of nutrient deficiencies, only very
little is known about the pharmacokinetic consequences and intestinal adaptation mechanisms
in these patients who are often subjected to multiple drug therapy. It was assumed that the
reduced intestinal surface area and the reduced time to drug disintegration and dissolution
caused by accelerated intestinal transit in these patients are associated with lowered
intestinal drug absorption. Additionally, this could be affected by the reduced production
of gastric hydrochloric acid by lowering the solubility in case of alkaline drugs. However,
it is possible that compensatory processes by other bowel segments could improve drug
absorption which could mean that drugs are still adequately absorbed.
From patients with resection of lower intestinal segments (i.e. distal jejunum, ileum,
colon) in consequence of Crohn´s disease or ulcerative colitis, the so-called small bowel
syndrome, it is known that the pharmacokinetics of drugs as digoxin, cyclosporine,
cimetidine and levothyroxine is markedly influenced in form of distinctly reduced intestinal
absorption. Furthermore, it was assessed that time-dependent adaptation processes occur in
these patients to compensate for the lost of function of the dissected tissue. Therefore,
the dependency on parenteral nutrition is decreasing or even full intestinal autonomy will
occur. The variety of changes is complex and dependent on the status of the underlying
disease, the existing surface area and its functional integrity. These complex adaptation
processes are caused by many growth factors, cytokines and hormones (e.g. peptide tyrosine
tyrosine (YY), insulin like growth factor (IGF), epidermal growth factor (EGF),
glucagon-like peptide (GLP-2), NT).
Most data on adaptive processes in the gastrointestinal tract after dissection of intestinal
segments are obtained in animal experiments. These data, however, are not predictive for the
situation in man. With regard to the situation after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery, there
is no information on how drugs are absorbed after bypassing the stomach, duodenum and parts
of the jejunum.
Therefore, pharmacokinetics of three probe drugs (talinolol, paracetamol and amoxicillin)
and intestinal expression of intestinal drug metabolizing enzymes (eg. CYP3A4, UGTs) and
drug transport proteins (eg. P-gp, MRP2, OATPB, PEPT) before, shortly after (7 days) and one
year after the gastric and intestinal bypass surgery in patients with morbid adipositas will
be measured. Paracetamol (acetaminophen) was chosen because it is rapidly and completely
absorbed from all parts of the gut. Appearance in blood describes the site of drug
dissolution within the intestine. Talinolol represents a well established P-gp substrate
which absorption is limited by this multidrug transporting protein. Finally, amoxicillin
acts as a probe drug for active uptake which is mediated by the peptide transporter PEPT
which is predominately expressed in the small intestine and responsible for active
H+-coupled uptake of ß-lactam antibiotics and ACE inhibitors.
It is hypothesized that bioavailability of talinolol and amoxicillin will be significantly
decreased after the Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery compared to the situation before
surgery. One year after the surgical intervention, adaptation processes in expression of
drug metabolizing enzymes and drug transporters are expected which at least in part
compensate for the decrease in bioavailability of the probe drugs.
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Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Pharmacokinetics Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Basic Science
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