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Pharmacokinetic Study in Patients With Chronic Kidney Disease and Healthy Volunteers

Pharmacokinetic Study of Propranolol, Losartan, and Eprosartan in Healthy Volunteers and Patients With Chronic Kidney Disease

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01087749
Acronym
CKD
Enrollment
24
Registered
2010-03-16
Start date
2010-03-31
Completion date
2012-12-31
Last updated
2013-05-30

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Kidney Disease

Brief summary

The purpose of this study is to find out how chemicals in the blood of patients with chronic kidney disease affect how medications are removed from the body. The patient will take one dose of three different drugs, one on each week, for a total of three single doses. The investigators want to find out if these three different medications are affected in different ways by the chemicals in the blood of patients with kidney disease.

Detailed description

It has been demonstrated that proteins known as drug transporters in different human organs and tissues are important for a drug to be absorbed, distributed, metabolized, and eliminated (ADME)18. The chemical properties of drugs can affect whether it needs a transporter protein to enter the cell or not. It is not well known how these proteins are affected in chronic disease and how different drugs may be absorbed, metabolized, or eliminated differently in certain diseases. Preliminary studies suggest that some drugs (those requiring drug transporter proteins) may show altered elimination in the presence of uremic toxins. Uremic toxins are substances accumulated in the blood of patients with chronic kidney disease and many are not removed through hemodialysis (HD). We hypothesize that the different classes of drugs (BDDCS class1, 2, and 3) will have different degrees of changes in AUC, meaning that for a class 1 drug we would see less of a change in AUC than in a class 3 drug because a class 3 drug requires transporters. Previous studies can't make that comparison because they used different patients for each drug, so even if there were a change in a class 1 drug, it can't be compared to a class 3 drug. In order to get an accurate comparison, we will test the three drugs on the same patient and see how he AUC changes from drug to drug within the same patient comparing it to the healthy volunteer (taking the same three drugs).

Interventions

Erythromycin 125mg PO will be given with 6oz of water. Blood samples will be obtained for 12 hours to determine the medication concentration in the plasma. There is no therapeutic effect on this study, since patients will receive a low single dose of the medication, and we'll assess the different pharmacokinetic parameters based on the concentrations of the medicine in plasma.

DRUGPropranolol

Propranolol 40mg PO will be given with 6oz of water.Blood samples will be obtained for 12 hours to determine the medication concentration in the plasma. There is no therapeutic effect on this study, since patients will receive a low single dose of the medication, and we'll assess the different pharmacokinetic parameters based on the concentrations of the medicine in plasma.

DRUGLosartan

Losartan 50mg PO will be given with 6oz of water. Blood samples will be obtained for 12 hours to determine the medication concentration in the plasma. There is no therapeutic effect on this study, since patients will receive a low single dose of the medication, and we'll assess the different pharmacokinetic parameters based on the concentrations of the medicine in plasma.

Sponsors

University of California, San Francisco
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Male or Female 18-70 years of age. * Healthy volunteers or chronic kidney disease (GFR\<40) * Be able to provide written informed consent and comply with requirements of the study. * Avoid eating grapefruit and drinking grapefruit juice from 7 days prior to the first study day until completion of the study. * Abstinence from alcoholic beverages, caffeinated beverages and orange juice from 6pm the night before a study day until completion of the study day. * Fast from food and beverages at least 8 hours prior to medication dosing. * Be able to read, speak, and understand English.

Exclusion criteria

* Subjects with contraindications to taking the study drugs * Subjects with known allergies to propranolol, losartan, or eprosartan. * Subjects who smoke tobacco. * Subjects with ongoing alcohol or illegal drug use. * Subjects who are pregnant, lactating, or attempting to conceive. * Subjects unable to maintain adequate birth control during the study. * Subjects unable to follow protocol instructions or protocol criteria. * Subjects with hematocrit \< 30mg/dL. * Subjects who are insulin requiring diabetics. * Subjects with low, or low normal blood pressure (systolic blood pressure \[BP\] \<100mmHg) * Subjects with uncontrolled high blood pressure.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Pharmacokinetic parameters3 weeksThree 12-hour days visits (on different weeks) will be investigated to obtain blood samples for 12 hours for three different medications. Blood samples will be obtained to determine the medication concentration in the plasma. There is no therapeutic effect on this study, since patients will receive a low single dose of the medication, and we'll assess the different pharmacokinetic parameters based on the concentrations of the medicine in plasma.

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026