Bergamottin, lime juice, and red wine as inhibitors of cytochrome P450 3A4 activity: comparison with grapefruit juice.
OBJECTIVES: Our objective was to assess the importance of bergamottin in drug interactions through comparisons between grapefruit juice and lime juice and the potential for drug interactions with red wine. METHODS: Bergamottin content and in vitro reversible/irreversible inhibition of cytochrome P450 ( CYP) 3A4 monooxygenase activities were determined for grapefruit and lime juices. The oral pharmacokinetics of felodipine and its primary metabolite (dehydrofelodipine) were determined with 250 mL of grapefruit juice, one quarter-strength lime juice, red wine, or water in a randomized crossover study. RESULTS: Bergamottin concentrations in grapefruit and lime juices were 25 and 100 micromol/L, respectively. For reversible inhibition, log volume-residual CYP3A4 activity relationships for grapefruit and lime juices had negative linear slopes that were parallel. The curve for grapefruit juice was 4.0-fold right-shifted, as compared with that for lime juice. For irreversible inhibition, the curves for grapefruit and lime juices were 4.0- and 1.4-fold left-shifted, as compared with those for reversible inhibition, respectively. Grapefruit juice increased the mean felodipine area under the plasma concentration-time curve (AUC) (mean +/- SE, 55 +/- 9 nmol. h/L versus 29 +/- 6 nmol. h/L; P <.05) and the plasma peak drug concentration (16 +/- 3 nmol/L versus 8 +/- 2 nmol/L, P <.05) and decreased the dehydrofelodipine/felodipine AUC ratio compared with those of water. One quarter-strength lime juice did not alter mean values. However, the changes in individual felodipine AUC after grapefruit juice and lime juice correlated (r(2) = 0.95) with a low slope (0.36). One quarter-strength lime juice more than doubled felodipine AUC and plasma peak drug concentration in 2 subjects. Red wine prolonged mean felodipine time to plasma peak drug concentration. Felodipine concentrations were low and peaked abruptly in 4 subjects. Adverse effects occurred in 1 subject. CONCLUSIONS: Bergamottin and reversible inhibition are not the primary substance and mechanism responsible for inhibition of CYP3A4 activity clinically. Red wine can cause dose dumping of extended-release felodipine in certain individuals.[1]References
- Bergamottin, lime juice, and red wine as inhibitors of cytochrome P450 3A4 activity: comparison with grapefruit juice. Bailey, D.G., Dresser, G.K., Bend, J.R. Clin. Pharmacol. Ther. (2003) [Pubmed]
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