Pharmacokinetic Analysis of Theophylline to Assess Noncompliance in Therapy

Author:

Konishi Hiroki1,Nakatsuka Takayuki2,Yoshida Michiaki3,Tamaki Shinji4,Minouchi Tokuzo5,Yamaji Akira6,Kinoshita Masahiko7

Affiliation:

1. Hiroki Konishi PhD, Clinical Pharmacist, Department of Hospital Pharmacy, Shiga University of Medical Science, Otsu, Japan

2. Takayuki Nakatsuka MD, Resident, First Department of Internal Medicine, Shiga University of Medical Science

3. Michiaki Yoshida MD PhD, Clinical Fellow, First Department of Internal Medicine, Shiga University of Medical Science

4. Shinji Tamaki MD PhD, Assistant Professor, First Department of Internal Medicine, Shiga University of Medical Science

5. Tokuzo Minouchi BS, Vice Director, Department of Hospital Pharmacy, Shiga University of Medical Science

6. Akira Yamaji PhD, Professor and Director, Department of Hospital Pharmacy, Shiga University of Medical Science

7. Masahiko Kinoshita MD PhD, Professor and Director, First Department of Internal Medicine, Shiga University of Medical Science

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To report a case showing patient noncompliance, supported by outcomes of pharmacokinetic analysis of theophylline as a surrogate drug. CASE SUMMARY: A 45-year-old woman with severe hypertension was treated with a variety of oral antihypertensive drugs, but there was no improvement in her elevated blood pressure. Since we suspected that her intestinal drug absorption capacity was impaired, a theophylline absorption test was performed. When oral theophylline was given to the patient in tablet form, the apparent bioavailability was only 20%, which agreed with our hypothesis. However, the bioavailability of theophylline given in liquid form was almost 100%, and theophylline in tablet form was confirmed to be fully bioavailable when the test was performed under supervision by medical staff. DISCUSSION: The almost complete bioavailability of oral theophylline indicated that there was no impairment in intestinal absorption capacity. The low bioavailability of theophylline observed after tablet administration in the first trial was apparently a result of noncompliance, because the staff did not supervise administration to ensure that tablets were swallowed. Thus, the low response to antihypertensive therapy was attributed to patient noncompliance in taking the drugs, despite her insistence to the contrary. CONCLUSIONS: The use of theophylline was a novel approach to evaluating the absorbability of orally administered drugs in a patient suspected of poor compliance with therapy. A great difference in theophylline bioavailability between the supervised and unsupervised trials was strongly indicative of patient noncompliance. The possibility of impaired absorption was virtually ruled out.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pharmacology (medical)

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