Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8551345 | Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology | 2018 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Phenylephrine hydrochloride (HCl) is a decongestant available in over-the-counter (OTC) medicines. Previously marketed prescription products contained phenylephrine tannate, an extended-release salt, which allowed dosing every 8-12â¯h. Given the regulatory history that cold medicines marketed before 1962 had limited supporting clinical data, and with widespread replacement of pseudoephedrine by phenylephrine in OTC products over the last ten years, the need for contemporary studies grew. This exploratory crossover study evaluated effects of salt form, acetaminophen, and food on phenylephrine pharmacokinetics and metabolites in healthy adults. Test treatments were 25â¯mg phenylephrine tannate (equivalent to 10â¯mg phenylephrine HCl) combined with 200â¯mg guaifenesin, fasted; 10â¯mg phenylephrine HCl combined with 650â¯mg acetaminophen, fasted; and 10â¯mg phenylephrine HCl, fed. The reference treatment was 10â¯mg phenylephrine HCl, fasted. Plasma phenylephrine pharmacokinetics and urine metabolites were determined. Although the tannate salt slowed phenylephrine absorption compared with the HCl salt, terminal concentrations were similar, suggesting that products containing the tannate salt should not be dosed less frequently than those containing the HCl salt. The premise that acetaminophen increases phenylephrine bioavailability by competition for presystemic sulfation was corroborated by increased phenylephrine sulfate in urine. Food delayed phenylephrine absorption, but not the total amount absorbed.
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Authors
Cathy K. Gelotte,