Abstract

Avitriptan, a selective 5-HT1-like receptor agonist, is an effective compound for the treatment of migraine headaches with a prolonged duration of response. A double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, ascending-dose study in 24 healthy subjects was designed to assess the safety, tolerance, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of avitriptan. This antimigraine drug was administered as two consecutive constant-rate IV infusions at three dose levels (12.7, 25.3, and 38.0 mg), which were targeted to produce plasma concentrations in and above the therapeutic range. The best fitting of the plasma concentration-time data was obtained by using a triexponential function yielding a terminal t1/2 of 8 hours. The areas under the plasma concentration versus time curves were proportional to dose, indicating linear pharmacokinetics. Moreover, the clearance and steady-state volume of distribution values were independent of the dose. The change in pulse rate and supine systolic and diastolic blood pressure was determined as pharmacodynamic effects of avitriptan. A "threshold log-linear" model, which accounts for the linear increase in pharmacodynamic effect with the log of plasma concentrations when the latter was higher than a certain threshold value, adequately described the pharmacodynamic data. The threshold plasma drug concentrations for the pulse rate and the diastolic and systolic blood pressure were 14, 74, and 161 ng/ml, respectively. Overall, avitriptan has consistent, linear pharmacokinetics and increases systolic and diastolic blood pressure in a predictable manner at a higher plasma concentration. However, this drug does not produce a significant change in pulse rate at the dose levels (12.7-38 mg) evaluated in this study.

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