David A. Flockhart

School of Medicine, Medicine, Clinical Pharmacology

Empty picture place holder

David A. Flockhart

Email

Scopus Publication Detail

The publication detail shows the title, authors (with indicators showing other profiled authors), information on the publishing organization, abstract and a link to the article in Scopus. This abstract is what is used to create the fingerprint of the publication.



Theophylline pharmacokinetics are not altered by lansoprazole in CYP2C19 poor metabolizers

Jae-Wook Ko; In-Jin Jang; Jae-Gook Shin; Sang-Keon Nam; Sang-Goo Shin; David A. Flockhart (Profiled Author: David A. Flockhart)

Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics. 1999;65(6):606-614.

Abstract

Lansoprazole is a potent gastric proton pump inhibitor that is metabolized by CYP2C19 but appears to induce the activity of hepatic microsomal CYP1A2 in a concentration-dependent manner. Because the inducing effect appears to be a dose-dependent phenomenon, it may be more important in poor metabolizers of CYP2C19 who have more than four times the area under the lansoprazole plasma concentration-time curve (AUC) and constitute 12% to 23% of Asian populations. Theophylline owes a significant portion of its metabolism to CYP1A2 and can cause gastric acid reflux that calls for concurrent use of proton pump inhibitors. We conducted a prospective, randomized, subject-blind, multicenter crossover study of the effect of multiple high-dose oral lansoprazole (30 mg twice a day for 7 days) on the pharmacokinetics of a single intravenous dose of theophylline (4.73 mg/kg) in healthy volunteers characterized for CYP2C19 genotype. The study compared the pharmacokinetics of lansoprazole and theophylline in five white extensive metabolizers, six Korean extensive metabolizers, and seven poor metabolizers of CYP2C19. The pharmacokinetics of lansoprazole were significantly different among groups; AUC values were 1.55 ± 0.20 μg · h/mL in white extensive metabolizers, 7.01 ± 0.72 μg · hr/mL in Korean extensive metabolizers, and 14.34 ± 2.60 μg · h/mL in poor metabolizers (P < .001). The administration of lansoprazole did not change intravenous theophylline clearance compared with placebo in any group, and theophylline clearance exhibited no correlation with AUC of lansoprazole (r(s) = 0.12; P > .1). These data suggest that usual therapeutic doses of lansoprazole have no clinically significant influence on the clearance of theophylline, even in poor metabolizers of CYP2C19.


PMID: 10391666    

Scientific Context

This section shows information related to the publication - computed using the fingerprint of the publication - including related publications, related experts with fingerprints representing significant amounts of overlap between their fingerprint and this publication. The red dots indicate whether those experts or terms appear within the publication, thereby showing potential and actual connections.

Related Publications

Related Experts

Author of this Document