Impact of gender, albumin, and CYP2C19 polymorphisms on valproic acid in Chinese patients: a population pharmacokinetic model

Author:

Guo Jinlin1ORCID,Huo Yayu2,Li Fang3ORCID,Li Yuanping1,Guo Zhaojun3,Han Huaqing3,Zhou Yuhong3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacy, Shanxi Provincial People’s Hospital, Taiyuan, China

2. Department of Pharmacy, Shanxi Bethune Hospital & Shanxi Academy of Medical Sciences, Taiyuan, China

3. Department of Pharmacy, The General Hospital of Taiyuan Iron & Steel (Group) Corporation, Taiyuan, China

Abstract

ObjectiveThis prospective study aimed to establish the valproic acid (VPA) population pharmacokinetic model in Chinese patients and realise personalised medication on the basis of population pharmacokinetics.MethodsThe patients’ clinical information and VPA plasma concentrations were collected from The General Hospital of Taiyuan Iron & Steel (Group) Corporation (TISCO). Nonlinear mixed-effect modelling was used to build the population pharmacokinetic model. To characterise the pharmacokinetic data, a one-compartment pharmacokinetic model with first-order absorption and elimination was used. The first-order conditional estimation with η-ε interaction was applied throughout the model-developing procedure. The absorption rate constant (Ka) was fixed at 2.38 hour−1, and the impact of covariates on clearance and apparent volume of distribution were also explored. Medical records of 60 inpatients were reviewed prospectively and the objective function value (OFV) of the base model and final model were 851.813 and 817.622, respectively.ResultsGender was identified as the covariate that had a significant impact on the volume of distribution, and albumin and CYP2C19 genotypes influenced clearance.ConclusionBootstrap and VPC indicated that a reliable model had been developed that was based on the simulation results, and a simple-to-use dosage regimen table was created to guide clinicians for VPA drug dosing.

Funder

General Hospital of TISCO

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Biochemistry (medical),Cell Biology,Biochemistry,General Medicine

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