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  • Title: Differences in pH-dependent activation rates of substituted benzimidazoles and biological in vitro correlates.
    Author: Kromer W, Krüger U, Huber R, Hartmann M, Steinijans VW.
    Journal: Pharmacology; 1998 Feb; 56(2):57-70. PubMed ID: 9494064.
    Abstract:
    Gastric proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) are substituted benzimidazole prodrugs that require an acid-induced activation. Its rate depends on the reactivity of the molecule relative to the environmental pH and determines the drug's tissue selectivity. Factors affecting the exposure of moderately acidic tissues to the activated PPI are the area under the serum concentration-time curve (AUC), serum protein binding, the partition coefficient logP and the serum elimination half-life relative to the chemical activation half-life at a critical tissue pH of about 5. These parameters have therefore been determined in a comparative fashion in the present study. The data shows that pantoprazole is less likely to undergo unwanted activation at moderately acidic targets as opposed to the parietal cell, compared to omeprazole. Actually, although 40 mg pantoprazole (steady state) gave a slightly higher serum AUC of the total parent compound than 40 mg omeprazole (10.5 vs. 7.1 micromol x h x l[-1]), a higher serum protein binding of pantoprazole versus omeprazole (98 vs. 96%) reversed the AUC values for the free drug in favor of a lower value for pantoprazole (0.19 vs. 0.28 micromol x h x l[-1]). It is the free parent compound that equilibrates across cell membranes to be activated in acidic tissue compartments. At pH 5.1, the activation half-life of pantoprazole was 4.7 versus 1.4 h for omeprazole, the latter being in the order of the common serum elimination half-life determined in an intraindividual comparison (1.24 vs. 1.25 h). Thus, pantoprazole is eliminated faster from blood than it is activated at a pH of about 5, while omeprazole is as quickly activated at this pH as it is eliminated from blood. Biological in vitro experiments confirmed that pantoprazole displays a lower liability to interfere with unwanted biological targets. This has been demonstrated in vitro for inhibition of both renal Na+/K+-ATPase, lysosomal acidification and the production of reactive oxygen species by neutrophils.
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