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Title: Effect of dietary fat content in meals on pharmacokinetics of quazepam. Author: Yasui-Furukori N, Kondo T, Takahata T, Mihara K, Ono S, Kaneko S, Tateishi T. Journal: J Clin Pharmacol; 2002 Dec; 42(12):1335-40. PubMed ID: 12463728. Abstract: Dietary fat content in meals has been reported to increase the absorption of several drugs proportionately. However, there is no information about the effects of dietary fat in meals on the sedative hypnotic agent quazepam, although limited data suggest that food intake alters quazepam absorption. Therefore, the authors measured and compared pharmacokinetic parameters of quazepam taken in a fasted state and taken 30 minutes after consuming meals containing different amounts of dietary fat. A three-arm randomized crossover study was conducted. Nine healthy male volunteers took a single oral 20-mg dose of quazepam under the following conditions: (1) after fasting overnight for at least 12 hours, (2) 30 minutes after consuming a low-fat meal (two slices of bread and 200 ml of apple juice), or (3) 30 minutes after consuming high-fat meal (two slices of bread with 30 gm of butter and 200 ml of apple juice). Plasma concentrations of quazepam and its metabolite, 2-oxoquazepam, were monitored up to 48 hours after the dosing. In comparison with corresponding plasma values for quazepam taken in a fasting state, the peak concentrations (Cmax) of quazepam taken 30 minutes after consuming a low-fat meal and high-fat meal were 243% (90% confidence interval [CI] = 161%-325%) and 272% (90% CI = 190%-355%), respectively. Area under the plasma concentration-time curve from 0 to 8 hours (AUC(0-8)) and 0 to 48 hours (AUC(0-48)) of quazepam was increased with the low-fat meal by 2-fold (90% CI = 1.5- to 2.7-fold) and 1.4-fold (90% CI = 1.0- to 1.7-fold), respectively, and with the high-fat meal by 2.2-fold (90% CI = 1.3- to 3-fold) and 1.5-fold (90% CI = 0.7- to 2.4-fold), respectively. The pharmacokinetic change in 2-oxoquazepam to the parent compound was similar. Quazepam was well tolerated, with no significant difference in the Stanford Sleepiness Scale between fasted and fed conditions. These findings show that food intake has an evident effect on quazepam absorption, but further studies are needed to clarify a determinant factor of this alteration (2.5-fold for Cmax and 2.1-fold for AUC(0-8), on average). It might not be necessary to do dose adjustment with meal content because quazepam is well tolerated.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]