Study of pharmacokinetic interaction of paroxetine and roxithromycin on bencycloquidium bromide in healthy subjects
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this study was to investigate the potential drug–drug interaction between Bencycloquidium
bromide (BCQB) and paroxetine, and between BCQB and roxithromycin.
Methods: Two studies were conducted on healthy male Chinese volunteers. Study A was an open-label,
two-period, one-sequence crossover study (n = 21). Each participant received a single nasal spray dose
of BCQB 180 lg on day 1. After a 7-day wash-out period, subjects received 20 mg of paroxetine from
day 8 to 17, and were co-administered 20 mg of paroxetine and BCQB 180 lg on day 18. In study B, participants
(n = 12) were randomly assigned to two groups. In period I, group A received BCQB 180 lg on
day 1, followed by the same dose four times daily from day 4 to 10, then, on day 11 a single dose of
150 mg roxithromycin with BCQB 180 lg were co-administered. In parallel, group B received a single
dose of roxithromycin 150 mg on day 1, followed by 300 mg of roxithromycin from day 4 to 10, then,
on day 11 a single dose of BCQB 180 lg with roxithromycin 300 mg were co-administered. After a
wash-out time of 7 days the respective treatments of each group (A and B) were swapped in period II.
Blood samples were collected for pharmacokinetic analysis. Statistical comparison of pharmacokinetic
parameters was performed to identify a possible drug interaction between treatments. Tolerability was
evaluated by recording adverse events.
Results: Study A: Geometric mean AUC0–36 for BCQB alone and co-administered with paroxetine were
474.3 and 631.3 pg h/ml, respectively. The geometric mean ratio (GMR) of AUC0–36 was 1.33 (1.13–
1.46), 90% C.Is, and was out the predefined bioequivalence interval (90% C.Is, 0.80–1.25). Geometric mean
Cmax were 187.0 and 181.2 pg/ml. Study B: The GMR of AUC0–36 was 0.98 (0.90–1.07), 90% C.Is for BCQB,
and the GMR of AUC0–72 was 0.98 (0.87–1.11), 90% C.Is for roxithromycin. Both GMRs were within the
predefined bioequivalence interval (90% C.Is, 0.80–1.25). Other pharmacokinetic parameters were within
the predefined interval. No serious adverse events were reported and no significant clinical changes were
observed in laboratory test results, vital signs and ECGs in any of the studies. All treatments were well
tolerated.
Conclusion: The co-administration of BCQB with paroxetine showed a moderate increase in BCQB exposure,
but was not clinically relevant. Also, no drug interaction was found between BCQB and
roxithromycin.
