• Br J Clin Pharmacol · Mar 2013

    Clinical Trial

    Pharmacokinetics of paracetamol and its metabolites in women at delivery and post-partum.

    • Aida Kulo, Mariska Y Peeters, Karel Allegaert, Anne Smits, Jan de Hoon, Rene Verbesselt, Liesbeth Lewi, Marc van de Velde, and Catherijne A J Knibbe.
    • Center for Clinical Pharmacology, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
    • Br J Clin Pharmacol. 2013 Mar 1; 75 (3): 850-60.

    AimA recent report on intravenous (i.v.) paracetamol pharmacokinetics (PK) showed a higher total clearance in women at delivery compared with non-pregnant women. To describe the paracetamol metabolic and elimination routes involved in this increase in clearance, we performed a population PK analysis in women at delivery and post-partum in which the different pathways were considered.MethodsPopulation PK parameters using non-linear mixed effect modelling were estimated in a two-period PK study in women to whom i.v. paracetamol (2 g loading dose followed by 1 g every 6 h up to 24 h) was administered immediately following Caesarean delivery and in a subgroup of the same women to whom single 2 g i.v.loading dose was administered 10-15 weeks post-partum.ResultsPopulation PK analysis was performed based on 255 plasma and 71 urine samples collected in 39 women at delivery and in eight of these 39 women 12 weeks post-partum. Total clearance was higher in women at delivery compared with 12th post-partum week (21.1 vs. 11.7 l h⁻¹) due to higher clearances to paracetamol glucuronide (11.6 vs. 4.76 l h⁻¹), to oxidative metabolites (4.95 vs. 2.77 l h⁻¹) and of unchanged paracetamol (1.15 vs. 0.75 l h⁻¹). In contrast, there was no difference in clearance to paracetamol sulphate.ConclusionThe increased total paracetamol clearance at delivery is caused by a disproportional increase in glucuronidation clearance and a proportional increase in clearance of unchanged paracetamol and in oxidation clearance, of which the latter may potentially limit further dose increase in this patient group.© 2012 The Authors. British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology © 2012 The British Pharmacological Society.

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