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      Mechanism-based pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic modelling of the reversal of buprenorphine-induced respiratory depression by naloxone : a study in healthy volunteers.

      Clinical Pharmacokinetics
      Adolescent, Adult, Algorithms, Analgesics, Opioid, administration & dosage, adverse effects, Buprenorphine, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Drug Interactions, Female, Half-Life, Humans, Infusions, Intravenous, Injections, Intravenous, Male, Models, Biological, Naloxone, pharmacokinetics, therapeutic use, Narcotic Antagonists, Respiratory Function Tests, Respiratory Insufficiency, chemically induced, metabolism, prevention & control

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          Abstract

          Respiratory depression is a potentially life-threatening adverse effect of opioid therapy. It has been postulated that the difficulty of reversing buprenorphine-induced respiratory depression is caused by slow receptor association-dissociation kinetics at the opioid mu receptor. The aim of this study was to characterise the pharmacodynamic interaction between buprenorphine and naloxone in healthy volunteers. A competitive pharmacodynamic interaction model was proposed to describe and predict the time course of naloxone-induced reversal of respiratory depression. The model was identified using data from an adaptive naloxone dose-selection trial following intravenous administration of buprenorphine 0.2mg/70kg or 0.4mg/70kg. The pharmacokinetics of naloxone and buprenorphine were best described by a two-compartment model and a three-compartment model, respectively. A combined biophase equilibration-receptor association-dissociation pharmacodynamic model described the competitive interaction between buprenorphine and naloxone at the opioid mu receptor. For buprenorphine, the values of the rate constants of receptor association (k(on)) and dissociation (k(off)) were 0.203 mL/ng/min and 0.0172 min(-)(1), respectively. The value of the equilibrium dissociation constant (K(D)) was 0.18 nmol/L. The half-life (t((1/2))) of biophase equilibration was 173 minutes. These estimates of the pharmacodynamic parameters are similar to values obtained in the absence of naloxone co-administration. For naloxone, the half-life of biophase distribution was 6.5 minutes. Because of the slow receptor association-dissociation kinetics of buprenorphine in combination with the fast elimination kinetics of naloxone, naloxone is best administered as a continuous infusion for reversal of buprenorphine-induced respiratory depression.

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