Abstract
A pharmacokinetic profile was developed following oral administration of a single 100-mg oral dose of isotretinoin to 12 normal male volunteers. Concentrations of isotretinoin and its isomer, tretinoin, were measured in blood samples from 12 subjects and in urine and fecal samples from three of the 12 subjects. Blood concentration-time data during a 72-hour sampling interval were variable and, in five of the 12 cases, showed pronounced secondary and tertiary concentration maxima which were consistent with the theory of enterohepatic circulation (EHC) of isotretinoin in man. In five of the 12 subjects, adequate fits of the data could not be obtained using classical bi- or triexponential equations but were successfully fitted using a recently developed recycling model. Maximum blood concentrations of isotretinoin ranged from 74 to 511 ng/ml and occurred between 1 and 4 hours after dosing. Secondary maxima generally occurred between 6 and 24 hours after dosing. The harmonic mean elimination half-life was approximately 20 hours. These findings suggest that steady-state blood concentrations should be observed within one week. Negligible amounts of unchanged isotretinoin were excreted in urine, whereas 53 to 74 per cent of the dose was recovered as intact isotretinoin in the feces. The amount of intact drug in the feces could reflect biliary excretion of the conjugate of isotretinoin that is deconjugated beyond the site where absorption may occur, as well as unabsorbed drug.
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