RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Disposition and Biotransformation of the Antiretroviral Drug Nevirapine in Humans JF Drug Metabolism and Disposition JO Drug Metab Dispos FD American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics SP 895 OP 901 VO 27 IS 8 A1 Paul Riska A1 Michael Lamson A1 Thomas MacGregor A1 John Sabo A1 Susan Hattox A1 Joseph Pav A1 James Keirns YR 1999 UL http://dmd.aspetjournals.org/content/27/8/895.abstract AB The pharmacokinetics and biotransformation of the antiretroviral agent nevirapine (NVP) after autoinduction were characterized in eight healthy male volunteers. Subjects received 200-mg NVP tablets once daily for 2 weeks, followed by 200 mg twice daily for 2 weeks. Then they received a single oral dose (solution) of 50 mg containing 100 μCi of [14C]NVP. Biological fluids were analyzed for total radioactivity, parent compound (HPLC/UV), and metabolites (electrospray liquid chromatography/mass spectroscopy and liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectroscopy). Mean recovery of radioactivity was 91.4%, with 81.3% excreted in urine and 10.1% recovered in the feces over a period of 10 days. Circulating radioactivity was evenly distributed between whole blood and plasma. At maximum plasma concentration, parent compound accounted for ∼75% of the circulating radioactivity. Mean plasma elimination half-lives for total radioactivity and NVP were 21.3 and 20.0 h, respectively. Several metabolites were identified in urine including 2-hydroxynevirapine glucuronide (18.6%), 3-hydroxynevirapine glucuronide (25.7%), 12-hydroxynevirapine glucuronide (23.7%), 8-hydroxynevirapine glucuronide (1.3%), 3-hydroxynevirapine (1.2%), 12-hydroxynevirapine (0.6%), and 4-carboxynevirapine (2.4%). Greater than 80% of the radioactivity in urine was made up of glucuronidated conjugates of hydroxylated metabolites of NVP. Thus, cytochrome P-450 metabolism, glucuronide conjugation, and urinary excretion of glucuronidated metabolites represent the primary route of NVP biotransformation and elimination in humans. Only a small fraction of the dose (2.7%) was excreted in urine as parent compound. The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics