Applies to Finasteride and Dutasteride ( which are both metabolized by CYP3A4 )
Fuhr U.
Institute for Pharmacology, Universitat zu Koln, Germany.
uwe.fuhr@medizin.uni.koeln.de
Concomitant intake with grapefruit juice increases the concentrations of
many drugs in humans. The effect seems to be mediated mainly by
suppression of the cytochrome P450 enzyme CYP3A4 in the small intestine
wall. This results in a diminished first pass metabolism with higher
bioavailability and increased maximal plasma concentrations of
substrates of this enzyme. The effect was most pronounced in drugs with
a high first pass degradation and in many cases has the clear potential
to reach clinical relevance, as shown by an occasional change in drug
effects or tolerability. For felodipine, nitrendipine, nisoldipine and
saquinavir, the interaction was most marked with median increases of
area under the curve (AUC) and/or the maximum (peak) plasma drug
concentration after single-dose administration (Cmax) values exceeding
70% of respective control periods. Less pronounced, but possibly
relevant, concentration increases were found for nifedipine, nimodipine,
verapamil, cyclosporin, midazolam, triazolam and terfenadine. This list
is not complete because many drugs have not been studied yet. The
components of grapefruit juice which are the most probable causes of the
interactions are psoralen derivatives, but the flavonoid naringenin may
also contribute. Concomitant grapefruit juice intake does not generally
decrease the variability of drug pharmacokinetic parameters. Therefore,
it is recommended that patients refrain from drinking grapefruit juice
when they are taking a drug that is extensively metabolised, unless a
lack of interaction has already been demonstrated for the drug. It is
also recommended that drugs possibly interacting with grapefruit juice
should be appropriately labelled. A place for grapefruit juice as a
drug-sparing agent in treatment involving expensive medicine cannot be
derived from the information currently available on grapefruit juice
interactions.
Publication Types:
* Review
* Review, Tutorial
PMID: 9565737 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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