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Vol. 30, Issue 8, 861-868, August 2002
Department of Pharmaceutics, School of Pharmacy (D.S., M.F., A.H.)
and David R. Bloom Center for Pharmacy (M.F., A.H.), The Hebrew
University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel; and Diabetes Unit (I.R.),
Hadassah University Hospital, Jerusalem, Israel
Metformin, a commonly used antidiabetic drug, exerts its
glucose-lowering effect due to metabolic activities at several sites of
action (biophases), including liver, intestine, muscle cells, and
adipocytes. The relative contribution of the individual biophases to
the overall glucose-lowering effect is not known. Thus, the aims of
this investigation were to study the influence of mode of drug
administration on the kinetics of glucose-lowering action of metformin
in diabetic rats and identify the contribution of different sites of
action to the overall response. Streptozotocin diabetic rats received
metformin in crossover fashion via intraduodenal, intravenous, and
intraportal routes as bolus dose or infusion regimens designed to yield
similar pharmacokinetic profiles. Metformin plasma concentrations and
blood glucose levels were measured following each mode of
administration. Despite the similarity in the concentration-time profiles obtained for different routes of metformin administration, intraduodenal administration produced larger response than intraportal metformin infusion, and lowest response was observed following intravenous administration. This finding indicates that a significant "first-pass" pharmacodynamic effect, which occurs in the
presystemic sites of action (liver and the gastrointestinal wall),
contributes to the overall glucose-lowering response of metformin. We
applied a combined pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic modeling approach to study the nature of the first-pass pharmacodynamic effect. The observed data were successfully described by a novel integrated indirect response pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic model that
revealed a correlation between the temporal metformin concentrations
that transit the portal vein and through the gut wall rather than with drug concentrations that accumulated in the liver and the intestinal wall.
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