Journal of Pharmacological Sciences (Jan 2012)

Effect of Renal Impairment on the Pharmacokinetics of Memantine

  • Takashi Moritoyo,
  • Tomoko Hasunuma,
  • Kazuhiro Harada,
  • Tomonori Tateishi,
  • Makoto Watanabe,
  • Tsutomu Kotegawa,
  • Masahiro Nagai,
  • Yuji Kumagai,
  • Tomomichi Fujitani,
  • Takahumi Okura,
  • Tomikazu Fukuoka,
  • Kenichi Miyoshi,
  • Bunzo Matsuura,
  • Shinya Furukawa,
  • Tomoe Kobori,
  • Hiroyoko Moritoyo,
  • Noriko Nishikawa,
  • Tomoaki Tsujii,
  • Hirotaka Iwaki,
  • Masahiko Nakamura,
  • Satoshi Makino,
  • Kei Ohnuma,
  • Koichiro Yuji,
  • Megumi Hashimoto,
  • Masaru Takasu,
  • Yutaka Hashizume,
  • Koji You,
  • Tomoko Matsumura,
  • Yuji Tanaka,
  • Nahoko Matsumoto,
  • Junichi Nakamura,
  • Jun Miura,
  • Tadao Akizawa,
  • Kozo Kitazawa,
  • Takanori Shibata,
  • Aki Kuroki,
  • Hirokazu Honda,
  • Masanori Mukai,
  • Kyoichi Ohashi,
  • Takuya Morimoto,
  • Hiromitsu Imai,
  • Toshiaki Okudaira,
  • Fuminori Sato,
  • Junko Imanaga,
  • Katsuhiro Tanaka,
  • Masahiro Nomoto

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 119, no. 4
pp. 324 – 329

Abstract

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The effect of renal impairment on the pharmacokinetics of a single oral dose of memantine (10 mg) was determined in Japanese subjects. Subjects were assigned to four groups based on baseline creatinine clearance (CLCR): normal renal function (> 80 mL/min, n = 6), and mild (50 to ≤ 80 mL/min, n = 6), moderate (30 to < 50 mL/min, n = 6), and severe renal impairment (5 to < 30 mL/min, n = 7). Mean memantine maximum plasma concentration (Cmax) was similar in the groups (12.66, 17.25, 15.75, and 15.83 ng/mL, respectively), as was mean time to Cmax (6.2, 5.2, 4.3, and 5.4 h, respectively). However, exposure to memantine determined from mean area under the plasma concentration–time curve was 1.62-, 1.97-, and 2.33-times higher in subjects with mild, moderate, and severe renal impairment, respectively, as compared to controls with normal renal function. Mean memantine plasma elimination half-life increased according to increasing renal impairment (61.15, 83.00, 100.13, and 124.31 h, respectively), while mean cumulative urinary recovery of unchanged memantine in 72 h after dosing decreased according to increasing renal impairment (33.68%, 33.47%, 23.60%, and 16.17%, respectively). These results are the same as those in the previous study on caucasian individuals, when compared per body weight. It is suggested that the dose of memantine should be halved in patients with renal impairment. Keywords:: memantine, renal impairment, pharmacokinetics, dose, dementia