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A fluvoxamine-caffeine interaction study

  • Unni Jeppesen*
  • , Steffen Loft
  • , Henrik E. Poulsen
  • , Kim Brøsen
  • *Corresponding author for this work
    • University of Southern Denmark
    • University of Copenhagen

    Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

    Abstract

    The selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor fluvoxamine is a very potent inhibitor of the liver enzyme CYP1A2, which is the major P450 catalysing the biotransformation of caffeine. Thus, a pharmacokinetic study was undertaken with the purpose of documenting a drug-drug interaction between fluvoxamine and caffeine. The study was carded out as a randomized, in vivo, cross-over study including eight healthy volunteers. In Period A of the study, each subject took 200 mg caffeine orally, and in Period B, the subjects took fluvoxamine 50 mg per day for 4 days and 100 mg per day for 8. days. On day 8 in Period B, the subjects again ingested 200 mg caffeine. After caffeine intake, blood and urine were sampled at regular intervals. Caffeine and its three primary demethylated metabolites, paraxanthine, theobromine and theophylline in plasma and the same four compounds plus II more metabolites in urine were assayed by HPLC. During fluvoxamine, the median of the total clearance of caffeine decreased from 107 ml min-1 to 21 ml min-1 and the half-life increased from 5 to 31 h. The N3-demethylation clearance of caffeine to paraxanthine decreased from 46 to 9 ml min-1; the N1- and N7-demethylation clearances decreased from 21 to 9 ml min-1 and from 14 to 6 ml min-1, respectively. The results confirm that CYP1A2 is the main enzyme catalysing the biotransformation of caffeine, in particular the N3-demethylation and partly the N1- and N7-demethylation. The results indicate that intake of caffeine during fluvoxamine treatment may lead to caffeine intoxication. Finally, oar study provides additional evidence that fluvoxamine can be used to probe CYP1A2 in drug metabolism.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalPharmacogenetics & Genomics
    Volume6
    Issue number3
    Pages (from-to)213-222
    ISSN1744-6872
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Jun 1996

    Keywords

    • Caffeine
    • CYP1A2
    • Fluvoxamine
    • Interaction

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