Advanced search×

Metabolism and excretion of atorvastatin in rats and dogs.

Drug Metab Dispos 27(8):916-23 (1999) PMID 10421619

Atorvastatin (AT) is a second-generation potent inhibitor of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase, clinically approved for lowering plasma cholesterol. Using a mixture of [D(5)/D(0)] AT and/or [(14)C]AT, the metabolic fate and excretion of AT were examined in rats and dogs following single and multiple oral doses. Limited biliary recycling was examined in one dog after a single dose of AT. AT-derived metabolites in bile samples were identified by metabolite screening of the [D(5)/D(0)] AT molecular clusters using tandem mass spectrometry. Bile was a major route of [(14)C] drug-derived excretion, accounting for 73 and 33% of the oral dose in the rat and dog, respectively. The remaining radioactivity was recovered in the feces; only trace amounts were excreted in urine. Radioactive components identified in rat and dog bile were the para- and ortho-hydroxy metabolites, a glucuronide conjugate of ortho-hydroxy AT, and unchanged AT. Two minor radioactive components were identified as beta-oxidation products of AT with one confirmed as a beta-oxidized AT derivative. The reappearance of AT and major metabolites in bile from a dog administered a sample of its previously excreted bile indicated biliary recycling is an important component in AT metabolism. Multiple dose administration in rats did not alter biliary metabolic profiles. Rat and dog plasma profiles after multiple dose administration were similar and showed no additional metabolites not found in bile. Examination of rat and dog bile and plasma indicates that AT primarily undergoes oxidative metabolism.

Version: za2963e q8zaf q8zb8 q8zc9 q8zd9 q8ze2 q8zf6 q8zg1

Similar articles you may find interesting…

  1. Atropisomeric 3-(beta-hydroxyethyl)-4-arylquinolin-2-ones as Maxi-K potassium channel openers.

    J Med Chem 50(5):1050-7 (2007) PMID 17274609

    The synthesis of a series of 3-beta-hydroxyethyl-4-arylquinolin-2-ones is described. These compounds contain hydrophilic and hydrophobic substituents ortho to the phenolic OH in the C ring of the quinolinone. Electrophysiological evaluation of the panel of compounds revealed that 11 and 16 with an u...
  2. Ru-TsDPEN with Formic Acid/Hünig’s Base for Asymmetric Transfer Hydrogenation, a Practical Synthesis of Optically Enriched ...

    J Org Chem 74(3):1411-1414 (2009) PMID 19105680

    The Noyori-Ikariya catalysts, Ru-TsDPEN 1 or 2, in combination with HCOOH/Hunig's base (5:2) have been successfully utilized for catalytic asymmetric transfer hydrogenation of alpha-ketopantolactam, and optically enriched N-substituted pantolactam was prepared (S/C = 500, up to 95% ee and 99% conver...
  3. Pharmacokinetics of the active antifungal enantiomer, SCH 42427 (RR), and evaluation of its chiral inversion in animals following its oral a...

    Chirality 14(5):436-41 (2002) PMID 11984759

    I column and quantification by UV absorbance at 205 nm. The bioavailability and pharmacokinetic profiles of the two enantiomers after oral administration of the racemate (genaconazole) were very similar in cynomolgus monkeys. In rats following dosing with genaconazole, the RR enantiomer had a lower...