Abstract
Patients with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) exhibit altered hepatic protein expression of metabolizing enzymes and transporters and altered xenobiotic pharmacokinetics. The botanical natural product silymarin, which has been investigated as a treatment of NASH, contains flavonolignans that inhibit organic anion-transporting polypeptide (OATP) transporter function. The purpose of this study was to assess the individual and combined effects of NASH and silymarin on the disposition of the model OATP substrate pitavastatin. Male Sprague Dawley rats were fed a control or a methionine- and choline-deficient diet (NASH model) for 8 weeks. Silymarin (10 mg/kg) or vehicle followed by pitavastatin (0.5 mg/kg) were administered intravenously, and the pharmacokinetics were determined. NASH increased mean total flavonolignan area under the plasma concentration-time curve (AUC0-120 min) 1.7-fold. Silymarin increased pitavastatin AUC0-120 min in both control and NASH animals approx. 2-fold. NASH increased pitavastatin plasma concentrations from 2 to 40 minutes, but AUC0-120 min was unchanged. The combination of silymarin and NASH had the greatest effect on pitavastatin AUC0-120 min, which increased 2.9-fold compared with control vehicle-treated animals. NASH increased the total amount of pitavastatin excreted into the bile 2.7-fold compared with control animals, whereas silymarin decreased pitavastatin biliary clearance approx. 3-fold in both control and NASH animals. This double hit of NASH and silymarin on hepatic uptake transporters is another example of a multifactorial pharmacokinetic interaction that may have a greater impact on drug disposition than each hit alone. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Multifactorial effects on xenobiotic pharmacokinetics are within the next frontier for precision medicine research and clinical application. The combination of silymarin and NASH is a probable clinical scenario that can affect drug uptake, liver concentrations, biliary elimination, and ultimately, efficacy and toxicity.
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More From: Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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