The disposition and metabolism of rofecoxib, a potent and selective cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitor, in human subjects. |
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Authors: | Rita A Halpin Arturo G Porras Leslie A Geer Margaret R Davis Donghui Cui George A Doss Eric Woolf Donald Musson Catherine Matthews Ralph Mazenko Jules I Schwartz Kenneth C Lasseter Kamlesh P Vyas Thomas A Baillie |
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Affiliation: | Department of Drug Metabolism, Merck Research Laboratories, West Point, Pennsylvania 19486, USA. |
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Abstract: | The disposition and metabolism of rofecoxib, a selective cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitor, were examined in healthy human subjects and in cholecystectomy patients. After oral administration of [(14)C]rofecoxib (125 mg, 100 micro Ci) to healthy subjects, the mean concentrations of total radioactivity and rofecoxib in plasma as a function of time indicated that the t(max) was achieved at 9 h postdose. After t(max), levels of both radioactivity and rofecoxib decreased in a parallel, exponential fashion (effective t(1/2) approximately equal 17 h). A similar result was obtained after oral administration of [(14)C]rofecoxib (142 mg, 100 micro Ci) to cholecystectomy patients equipped with an L-tube. In healthy subjects, radioactivity was recovered predominantly from the urine (71.5% of dose), with a small amount excreted in feces (14.2%). In patients with an L-tube, half the radioactive dose was recovered in feces, with a lesser amount excreted in urine (28.8%) and a negligible fraction in bile (1.8%). Rofecoxib underwent extensive metabolism in humans, and very little parent drug was recovered unchanged in urine (<1%). Products resulting from both oxidative and reductive pathways were identified by a combination of (1)H NMR and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry analyses, and included rofecoxib-3',4'-trans-dihydrodiol, 4'-hydroxyrofecoxib-O-beta-D-glucuronide, diastereomeric 5-hydroxyrofecoxib-O-beta-D-glucuronide conjugates, 5-hydroxyrofecoxib, rofecoxib-erythro-3,4-dihydrohydroxy acid, and rofecoxib-threo-3,4-dihydrohydroxy acid. Interconversion of rofecoxib and 5-hydroxyrofecoxib appeared not to be a quantitatively important pathway of rofecoxib disposition in human subjects, in contrast to previous findings in rats. |
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