Abstract

Since diabetes mellitus and osteoarthritis are highly prevalent diseases, combinations of antidiabetic agents like repaglinide (REP) and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID) like celecoxib (CEL) could be commonly used in clinical practice. In this study, a simple and sensitive bioanalytical HPLC method combined with fluorescence detector (HPLC-FL) was developed and fully validated for simultaneous quantification of REP and CEL. A simple protein precipitation procedure and reversed C18 column with an isocratic mobile phase (mixture of ACN and pH 6.0 phosphate buffer) were employed for sample preparation and chromatographic separation. The fluorescence detector was set at a single excitation/emission wavelength pair of 240 nm/380 nm. The linearity (10–2000 ng/mL), accuracy, precision, extraction recovery, matrix effect, and stability for this method were validated as per the current FDA guidance. The bioanalytical method was applied to study pharmacokinetic interactions between REP and CEL in vivo, successfully showing that concurrent administration with oral REP significantly altered the pharmacokinetics of oral CEL. Furthermore, an in vitro metabolism and protein binding study using human materials highlighted the possibility of metabolism-based interactions between CEL and REP in clinical settings.

Highlights

  • Arthritis and diabetes mellitus are highly prevalent diseases with a total of over 350 million patients worldwide [1,2]

  • type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is generally recognized as a comorbidity of arthritis [7], while some previous studies have focused on diabetes as a risk factor of arthritis [8,9]

  • This study successfully developed a simple, sensitive, and validated HPLC method combined with fluorescence detector (HPLC-FL) method for simultaneous determination of REP and CEL in rat plasma

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Arthritis and diabetes mellitus are highly prevalent diseases with a total of over 350 million patients worldwide [1,2]. The most common types of arthritis and diabetes mellitus are osteoarthritis (OA) and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), respectively [3]. OA affects 14% of adults aged ≥25 years, and 34% of these patients are aged >65 years [4]; T2DM affects 12% of adults aged ≥20 years, and 26% of these are aged >65 years [5]. T2DM is generally recognized as a comorbidity of arthritis [7], while some previous studies have focused on diabetes as a risk factor of arthritis [8,9]. It is evident that T2DM is closely associated with an increased incidence and prevalence of OA, though the reasons remain unclear

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call