British journal of clinical pharmacology
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Br J Clin Pharmacol · May 2004
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialThe effect of quinidine, used as a probe for the involvement of P-glycoprotein, on the intestinal absorption and pharmacodynamics of methadone.
There is considerable unexplained interindividual variability in the methadone dose-effect relationship. The efflux pump P-glycoprotein (P-gp) regulates brain access and intestinal absorption of many drugs. Evidence suggests that methadone is a P-gp substrate in vitro, and P-gp affects methadone analgesia in animals. However the role of P-gp in human methadone disposition and pharmacodynamics is unknown. This investigation tested the hypothesis that the intestinal absorption and pharmacodynamics of oral and intravenous methadone are greater after inhibition of intestinal and brain P-gp, using the P-gp inhibitor quinidine as an in vivo probe. ⋯ Quinidine increased the plasma concentrations of oral methadone in the absorptive phase and the miosis caused by methadone, suggesting that intestinal P-gp affects oral methadone absorption and hence its clinical effects. Quinidine had no effect on methadone pharmacodynamics after intravenous administration, suggesting that if quinidine is an effective inhibitor of brain P-gp, then P-gp does not appear to be a determinant of the access of methadone to the brain.