Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6088650 Digestive and Liver Disease 2015 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundPhosphodiesterase-5-inhibitors may lower portal pressure.AimsTo investigate the effect of the phosphodiesterase-5-inhibitor udenafil on hepatic and systemic haemodynamics in liver cirrhosis.MethodsIn an open-label phase-II-study, patients with liver cirrhosis Child A/B and hepatic venous pressure-gradient ≥12 mmHg received 12.5 mg/day, 25 mg/day, 50 mg/day, 75 mg/day (n = 5, each), or 100 mg/day (n = 10) udenafil p.o. for one week. On days 0 and 6, hepatic venous pressure-gradient was measured prior to and one hour after drug ingestion. Endpoints were reduction of hepatic venous pressure-gradient from day 0 pre to day 6 post intake and reduction in the acute setting. Pharmacokinetics were measured in the two lowest dosage groups.ResultsCombining the 75 and 100 mg/day groups hepatic venous pressure-gradient reduction after drug intake was 19.9% (p = 0.0006) on day 0. From day 0 pre-dose to day 6 post-dose hepatic venous pressure-gradient decreased by 15.7% (p = 0.040) and in 5/15 patients by ≥20% or to <12 mmHg. In the 100 mg/day group, mean arterial pressure decreased from 98.9 mmHg by 6.2 mmHg (p = 0.037) from day 0 pre-dose to day 6 post-dose. Heart rates or electrocardiograms were unchanged. Udenafil was eliminated with t1/2 = 25 h.ConclusionsOral application of 75-100 mg of the phosphodiesterase-5-inhibitor udenafil lowers portal pressure in the acute setting by about 20% without relevant systemic cardiovascular side effects.

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