Veterinary Medicine: Research and Reports (Aug 2016)

Pharmacokinetics of esomeprazole following intravenous and oral administration in healthy dogs

  • Cook EK,
  • Satake N,
  • Sykes BW,
  • Bennett EL,
  • Mills PC

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 7
pp. 123 – 131

Abstract

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Emily K Cook, Nana Satake, Ben W Sykes, Emma L Bennett, Paul C Mills School of Veterinary Sciences, The University of Queensland, Gatton, Queensland, Australia Abstract: Investigation into the pharmacokinetic profile of esomeprazole was conducted using eight healthy dogs after intravenous (IV) and oral (po) administration in a two-part randomized crossover study. The dogs were fasted for a minimum of 12 hours and then received esomeprazole either intravenously (dose range 0.93–1.48 mg/kg) or orally using an enteric-coated formulation (dose range 0.95–1.50 mg/kg). After a 1-week washout period, the dogs received an alternative treatment. Serial blood samples were collected at predetermined time points, and plasma esomeprazole concentrations were determined by using ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry. Noncompartmental pharmacokinetic analyses were performed. Then, the area under the plasma concentration/time curve (AUC) and maximal plasma concentration (Cmax) values were normalized to a 1.0 mg/kg dose of esomeprazole, that is, AUC/dose. Median (range) dose-normalized peak plasma concentration (Cmax) values for the IV and po formulations were 4.06 µg/mL (2.47–4.57 µg/mL) and 1.04 µg/mL (0.31–1.91 µg/mL), respectively. The median (range) time-to-peak concentration (Tmax) for the po formulation was 105 minutes (45–360 minutes). Median (range) plasma terminal half-life (t½) was 45.56 minutes (39.43–64.20 minutes) for the IV formulation and 63.97 minutes (44.02–109.94 minutes) for the enteric-coated po formulation. The median (range) po bioavailability was 63.33% (32.26%–79.77%). Clinically, both po and IV formulations were well tolerated with minimal side effects observed. Keywords: proton pump inhibitors, gastric ulcers, and oesophagitis

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