Differences in bioavailability between cocaine and cocaethylene and their implications for drug-reward studies |
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Authors: | John B. Nobiletti Peter I. Jatlow Charles W. Bradberry |
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Affiliation: | (1) Departments of Psychiatry and Laboratory Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine and the West Haven Veterans Administration Medical Center, 06516, CT, USA |
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Abstract: | Cocaethylene, a psychoactive metabolite resulting from combined ethanol/cocaine consumption, is of interest because its psychostimulant properties may partially underlie combined cocaine/ethanol use, and because it has the potential for use as a probe of drug reward mechanisms due to its enhanced selectivity at monoamine uptake sites compared to cocaine. To determine the relative systemic bioavailabilities of cocaine and cocaethylene, sequential plasma samples were obtained from awake rats following drug administration. Following intravenous administration of 3 µmol/kg (molar equivalent of 1 mg/kg cocaine-HCl), both drugs achieved similar time courses and areas under the plasma concentration versus time curve. In contrast, intraperitoneal administration of 44 µmol/kg (molar equivalent of 15 mg/kg cocaine HCl) showed peak plasma levels, and the area under the plasma concentration vs time curve for cocaine to be approximately twice that for cocaethylene. Comparison of dose corrected areas under the curve of the two routes of administration for each drug indicated that relative systemic bioavailability of cocaethylene following intraperitoneal administration is only 58% that of cocaine. In addition, the elimination of both cocaine and cocaethylene was found to be slower following intraperitoneal administration compared to the intravenous route. The implications of these results are discussed with respect to the relative potency of these two compounds, as inferred from behavioral, drug reward, and lethality studies. Also, the differences noted will need to be taken into account when making mechanistic interpretations from comparative drug reward studies. |
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Keywords: | Cocaine Ethanol Cocaethylene Ethylcocaine Pharmacokinetics Drug reward |
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